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EN
In his article, the author first characterises the basic differences between Czech Ashkenazic and Modern Hebrew pronunciation in the context of Jewish Czech, its development and the process of its vanishing in the 20th and 21st centuries. Next, in the case study on Jewish ethnolectal lexical features of a particular respondent, Petr Brod (born 1951), on whom a linguistic study was conducted, the author presents a specific Jewish idiolectal portrait.
PL
Autor w swoim tekście charakteryzuje podstawowe różnice pomiędzy czeską aszkenazyjską a nowohebrajską wymową w żydowskim etnolekcie czeszczyzny, w kontekście jego rozwoju oraz procesu zapominania w XX i XXI wieku. Następnie, w oparciu o studium przypadku, opisując żydowskie etnolektalne elementy leksykalne respondenta Petra Broda (ur. 1951), autor prezentuje konkretny żydowski portret idiolektalny.
EN
Handbook of Polish, Czech and Slovak Holocaust Fiction is a work in progress aiming at becoming a standard reference work addressed to universities and public libraries and the broader public. It includes novels, short stories, poems and plays written in Polish, Czech and Slovak within the scope of 650 standard pages. The table of contents consists of 53 articles focused on Polish, 45 articles on Czech, and 23 articles on Slovak literature. The editors provide an introduction about the main developments of Holocaust literature in the broader context of three lands: crucial topics, situations, characters, motifs and places, periodization due to political changes, reception processes in the national and transnational context. The Handbook aims primarily at the researchers and readers in Western Europe and the U.S. where the Polish, Czech and Slovak Holocaust fiction remains largely unknown. The project results from the cooperation among researchers from Polish, Czech, German and Slovak universities. This article presents two entries from Polish and Czech literature.
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