This thesis explores in detail three academically neglected novels by Milan Kundera: Slowness (1995), Identity (1998) and Ignorance (2002). Originally written in French, the author’s second language, after six novels, a short-story collection and a play originally written in Czech, these texts are often bracketed off from the rest of his writing and seen as something of an inferior addendum. This is despite clear thematic similarities that cross the linguistic divide and that I demonstrate here are of central significance to the author’s entire novelistic project. This exploration not only reveals that these three French novels place in the foreground themes that have rippled in and out of focus across Kundera’s earlier Czech work an...
This text aims to elaborate the intertextual idea of the novel, as implied in Milan Kundera’s three ...
This dissertation aims to make a contribution to political theory by examining the role novelists ca...
The article intends to present an approach to Milan Kundera, an author who leaves Prague and takes r...
The Czechoslovak author Milan Kundera’s first novel in French, Slowness, compares the heady speed of...
The contribution characterises the poetics of the last four novels written by Milan Kundera (Slownes...
This study suggests a combined reading, between memory and displacement, of three different Milan Ku...
The article examines the notion of Czech (Czechoslovak) ‘osmichki’ in the novels of a famous writer ...
The subject of this work is the analysis of prose written in French by Milan Kundera, in particular ...
The article examines the notion of Czech (Czechoslovak) ‘osmichki’ in the novels of a famous writer ...
During the twentieth century, the former Czechoslovakia was at the forefront of Communist takeover a...
World wars, technological developments and political events that have played an important role in th...
In this study, I argue that Milan Kundera’s Immortality - as his exemplary notion of a ‘moral’ new n...
In this study, I argue that Milan Kundera’s Immortality - as his exemplary notion of a ‘moral’ new n...
This thesis compares The Joke and Immortality, the first and the last of Kundera's novel, which were...
The Czech novelist Milan Kundera who has lived in France since 1975 is all too familiar with betraya...
This text aims to elaborate the intertextual idea of the novel, as implied in Milan Kundera’s three ...
This dissertation aims to make a contribution to political theory by examining the role novelists ca...
The article intends to present an approach to Milan Kundera, an author who leaves Prague and takes r...
The Czechoslovak author Milan Kundera’s first novel in French, Slowness, compares the heady speed of...
The contribution characterises the poetics of the last four novels written by Milan Kundera (Slownes...
This study suggests a combined reading, between memory and displacement, of three different Milan Ku...
The article examines the notion of Czech (Czechoslovak) ‘osmichki’ in the novels of a famous writer ...
The subject of this work is the analysis of prose written in French by Milan Kundera, in particular ...
The article examines the notion of Czech (Czechoslovak) ‘osmichki’ in the novels of a famous writer ...
During the twentieth century, the former Czechoslovakia was at the forefront of Communist takeover a...
World wars, technological developments and political events that have played an important role in th...
In this study, I argue that Milan Kundera’s Immortality - as his exemplary notion of a ‘moral’ new n...
In this study, I argue that Milan Kundera’s Immortality - as his exemplary notion of a ‘moral’ new n...
This thesis compares The Joke and Immortality, the first and the last of Kundera's novel, which were...
The Czech novelist Milan Kundera who has lived in France since 1975 is all too familiar with betraya...
This text aims to elaborate the intertextual idea of the novel, as implied in Milan Kundera’s three ...
This dissertation aims to make a contribution to political theory by examining the role novelists ca...
The article intends to present an approach to Milan Kundera, an author who leaves Prague and takes r...