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A COB OF DRAMATIC CLASSICS

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EN
A theatrical historian Ladislav Cavojsky on the occasion of the national Slovak festival of theatrical staging by Slovak classic and contemporary dramatists in Palarik's Rakova wrote his study on one of the founders of the modern Slovak drama Jan Palarik, a native of the community Rakova. He is approaching his life fortune (as a catholic preacher with a strong nationhood understanding, he was accused of 'Pan - Slavism' and moved to a German vicarage in Hungarian Pest) and above all, he is dealing with his artistic creation for theatre. He is analyzing the position of his three comedies 'Drotar', 'Inkognito', and 'Zmierenie, or Dobrodruzstvo pri obzinkoch' (Tinker, Incognito, and Reconciliation or Adventure in Harvest- Home) and one historical drama 'Dmitri Samozvanets' (Dmitri the Self- Appointed) in the history of the Slovak theatre. He is reminding of the fact that a preacher and dramatist is also a composer, he traced a record on presentation of his 'Smutocny spev' (Mourning Voice) to part with his friend, a chairman of 'Matica slovenska', a bishop Stefan Moyses. He is observing that even nowadays the creation of Palarik serves an inspiration to theatrical artists and becomes a basis for origination of works of art sought by the public.
EN
After the revolutionary year 1848 both Slovak and Czech political representations faced the same challenge in their searching for a new constitutional order, although their respective state-forming activity was differed. In this context the overlapping conceptions of Jan Palarik and Karel Havlicek Borovsky are worthy consideration. They both underline the strategy of gradualism in the nation-forming process as well as cultural distinctiveness combined with civic ethos. Further, they both combined the romanticism grounded in national feeling with the Enlightenment ideas and the importance of practical reason. Their liberalism underlining the national and civic equality and the bottom up political activity thus can be seen as a new incentive in creating the constitutional grounds of both Slovak and Czech nations.
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