692 research outputs found

    The Life and Times of Jozef Lenart

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    Resume The dissertation thesis The Life and Times of Jozef Lenart deals with life and political influence of a Communist politician Jozef Lenart. The work begins with Lenart's childhood in the Slovak countryside and his maturing in the service of Bata concern where Lenart was trained. From depiction of Lenart participation in Slovak uprising author goes to the main topic of the thesis. It is almost 45 years political activity of Lenart in various party's and state functions. During such a long career Jozef Lenart became among others, the prime minister of the Czechoslovakian government and a member of the leading management of the Communist party. Author in direct contradiction to the concept of totalitarianism and widely shared ideas about a party leadership as a monolithic opinion power centres approached political influence of Jozef Lenart as a description of mutual interactions within the dictatorial regime. Author also defined Lenart's political attitudes and affiliation with interest and opinion groups and assessed how successfully Lenart managed to assert his views

    Renaissance Motifs in Jozef Ciller’s Shakespearean Scenographies

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    Abstract Employing a comparative method, the present study explores the Renaissance expression of Jozef Ciller’s Shakespearean scenographies. Based on an analysis of preserved archival material (scenographic proposals, photographs from productions, video recordings, reviews, etc.) and personal communication with Jozef Ciller, the author examines how he transposed general features of European Renaissance (visual arts, architecture) into individual scenographic solutions. The author’s analysis also aims to identify how Ciller worked with the architecture and scenography of Elizabethan theatre Renaissance and observe his work with Renaissance elements depending on whether a scenography was meant for indoors or outdoors. The author concludes that Jozef Ciller employs Renaissance elements as motifs to preserve the awareness of man’s Renaissance spirit and greatness.</jats:p

    Renaissance Motifs in Jozef Ciller’s Shakespearean Scenographies

    No full text
    Employing a comparative method, the present study explores the Renaissance expression of Jozef Ciller’s Shakespearean scenographies. Based on an analysis of preserved archival material (scenographic proposals, photographs from productions, video recordings, reviews, etc.) and personal communication with Jozef Ciller, the author examines how he transposed general features of European Renaissance (visual arts, architecture) into individual scenographic solutions. The author’s analysis also aims to identify how Ciller worked with the architecture and scenography of Elizabethan theatre Renaissance and observe his work with Renaissance elements depending on whether a scenography was meant for indoors or outdoors. The author concludes that Jozef Ciller employs Renaissance elements as motifs to preserve the awareness of man’s Renaissance spirit and greatness

    Professor Jozef Gécz

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    Jozef G&amp;eacute;cz is a NH&amp;amp;MRC Senior Research Fellow and affiliate Associated Professor at the Department of Paediatrics, University of Adelaide . In 2001 he established, and currently heads the Neurogenetics laboratory within the Department of Genetic Medicine. His main interests are in the identification and characterisation of genes involved in X-chromosome associated pathology, intellectual disability in particular and as such understanding the molecular basis of learning, memory and cognition. Jozef identified or was involved in the identification and characterisation of more than 20 genes implicated in various syndromic and non-syndromic forms of X-linked mental retardation. Among these are ATRX, FMR2 (FRAXE associated gene), FMR3 (2 nd FRAXE associated gene), RSK2, GRIA3, STK9 (novel Rett syndrome gene), KLF8, FGF13, FAM11A (FRAXF associated gene), ARX, PHF6, NHS, PQBP1, FITSJ1 as well as the gene SEDL for a form of X-linked bone dysplasia. He is an author or a co-author on more than 90 peer reviewed publications with over SCI 600 citations. Jozef studied human molecular genetics in Czechoslovakia at the Comenius University in Bratislava from 1981-1986. He completed his PhD at the Slovak Academy of Sciences in 1991. His first post-doctoral study, supported by INSERM fellowship, was in Marseille , France within Prof. Michel Fontes&amp;#39; INSERM unit at the Faculty of Medicine. He joined the Department of Genetics Medicine (former Department of Cytogenetics and Molecular Genetics), Women&amp;#39;s and Children&amp;#39;s Hospital, Adelaide in June 1994

    Malzeme bilimi ve mühendisliği terimleri sözlüğü

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    #nofulltext# --- Çapan, Levon Jozef (Arel Author)

    External transactional fraud in a dominant bank in CEE countries

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    Author Jozef PolákMasterarbeit Universität Linz 2023Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba

    Jozef Marušiak - the translator - the perfect comparatist?

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    In the article under the title Jozef Marušiak — the translator — the prefect comparatist? the author Marta Buczek raises the problem of necessary relationships between new Comparative Studies and Translation Studies. The theory of Comparative Studies and Translation Studies presented in this paper shows that that disciplines are closely connected to each other by the subject of research. The subject of interest of the Comparative Studies is consistent with the interest of research in Translation Studies. Turning towards comparative perception of the translation has focused its attention on the creative role of translation in the culture and the creative role of the translator. In the next part of the article the author analyzes the translation activity of well known Slovak translator of Polish literature — Jozef Marušiak. The author answers the question, who is the perfect comparatist and if the Slovak translator can be assumed for the perfect comparatist

    Prose writer Jozef Horák (1907–1974)

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    Príspevok sa sústredil na literárnohistorický výskum významnej osobnosti slovenskej literatúry minulého storočia. Jozef Horák sa k literárnym ambíciám dopracoval ako učiteľ na vidieckej škole, v povojnových rokoch patrila jeho literárna tvorba do epicentra vzdelávacej, výchovnej a kultúrnej činnosti dobového literárneho a kultúrneho života. Jozef Horák zo žánrov epiky využíval viacero a veľmi úspešne. Od poviedkovej tvorby po román, od látky z prítomnosti po tematiku z regionálnych dejín. Publikovaná tvorba je len časť zázemia samotného autora, pozornosť si žiadajú tie materiály a dokumenty, ktoré zostali na pracovnom stole, medzi spoločenskými a tvorivými kontaktmi a ony doplnia ľudský, osobnostný, poznávací aj autentický tvorivý rozmer osobnosti spisovateľa, o čo sme sa usilovali pri Jozefovi Horákovi.The contribution focused on literary-historical research of a significant personality of Slovak literature of the last century. Jozef Horák developed his literary ambitions as a teacher at a rural school. Jozef Horák has used the epic genres more and more successfully. From storytelling to novel, from substance from present to themes from regional history. The published work is only part of the author\u27s background, the materials and documents that remain on the desk require social and creative contacts, and they will complement the human, personality, cognitive and authentic creative dimension of the writer\u27s personality that we sought for Jozef Horak

    Percorsi italiani di Jozef Duzyk (1974-1982)

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    The author tries to sum up the Italian, especially Roman years of Jozef Duzyk, scholar, librarian, traveller. In his articles and books he showed a deep knowledge of Italian history, art and life. Beside Rome he knew and wrote first of all about CapriIt

    Personal reflections on Jozef Siciak's mathematical journey

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    The recent passing of Professor Jozef Siciak inevitably brings about reflections on his legacy, not just in terms of mathematical results he had obtained or inspired, but also in terms of shaping the way mathematics is being developed internally and as a part of science in general. Based on several decades of close personal contacts, the author attempts to outline Professor Siciak's views concerning these matters.</p
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