
@article{ref1,
title="Mala forma a jeji vybusny potencial LAPKOv£&quot; JlftfHO pi§TORY (1969)",
journal="Ceska Literatura",
year="2018",
author="Vojvodik, J.",
volume="66",
number="4",
pages="504-526",
abstract="This paper is based on the eight-verse nursery rhyme by poet jirf PiStora (1932-1970) Lapkovi (Highwaymen), which was directed against the 1968 Russian occupation. When it was printed in Matcrfdouska (1970), it was immediately castigated by aggressive rhetoric in Rudcprdvo as subversive &quot;anti-Soviet propaganda&quot; which was made &quot;all themore dangerous&quot; by the fact that it &quot;abused∗ young readers. The &quot;small form&quot; of the nursery rhyme had substantial, and for Pistora fatal, consequences, which resulted in his suicide, astheoppressive atmosphere of &quot;normalization&quot; first descended. In connection with the problematic, but influential and still much-debated theory of &quot;simple forms&quot; expounded by the Dutch art historian and literary scholar Andre Jolles (1874-1946), the question is examined here of the extent to which &quot;small forms&quot; arc formative or have a form-determining disposition which can develop an explosive potential under unfavourable social-political circumstances. This question involves the risk-prone, but sometimes unavoidable entanglement of literature/ poetry with politics, which came to be of fatal importance to Jolles himself, as he committed suicide in February 1946 in Leipzig. Jolles postulates that at the heart of every &quot;simple form&quot; (myth, legend, joke, saying, case, memorabilia, riddle, fairy tale etc.) lies a &quot;verbal gesture&quot;, i.e. a gestural basis for speech (and text). In line with the &quot;explosion in eulture&quot; theory developed by Yuri M. Lotman, an accompanying feature of this conception of explosiveness is unpredictability, which is naturally associated with a certain risk. Explosive processes within culture mean that the sphere of causal relations breaks through into the sphere of unpredictability, but they can also involve a transgressive breach of the boundary between stability and &quot;primed- readiness&quot;. Pistora's &quot;gestural act&quot;, a children's nursery rhyme as an ethically and politically motivated &quot;risk-prone gesture&quot;, which escalated into a suicidal gesture, is compared here with an analogous gesture by German poet and essayist Eugen Gottlob Winkler (1912-1936). For both poets, exposed to political persecution by &quot;national communism&quot; and &quot;rational communism&quot; (to use Helmuth Plessner's terms), their final radical gesture was an attempt to save and consummate their existence as free aesthetic-ethical beings. Their decision to lay down their lives and &quot;give themselves death&quot; (Derrida) is also reflected here in the backdrop of considerations over ethical responsibility and the paradox of self-sacrifice expounded by Jan Patocka and Jacques Derrida. © 2018 Czech Academy Science Editorial Office. All rights reserved.<p /><p>Language: cs</p>",
language="cs",
issn="0009-0468",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}