Ján Hollý (1785-1849), one of the greatest Slovak poets of the Romantic age, laid a sturdy foundation for the construction of modern Slovak nationhood with his three epic poems: Svatopluk (1833), the Cyrillo-Methodiad (1835), and Sláv (1839). These works both prove the suppleness and power of Slovak as a linguistic medium capable of great poetic expression and remind the Slovaks, and the world at large, of the glory that was the mediaeval Great Moravian Empire (Svatopluk), the roots of the Slovaks and Moravians in European culture (the Cyrillo-Methodiad), and the signal role of the Slavs in creating a vibrant, humanistic culture in early Central Europe (Sláv). Hollý emphasises the Slovaks as a nation in their own right, while extending a fraternal hand toward the other Slavic nations, upon whom he lavishes equal praise.
With The Slovak Epics, Glagoslav presents the reader with the entirety of Ján Hollý's three epic poems translated and introduced by Charles S. Kraszewski. All who are interested in Slovak literature, the poetry of the Romantic Era in general, and Slavic reciprocity and unity, will find The Slovak Epics worth reading.
This book was published with a financial support from SLOLIA, Centre for Information on Literature in Bratislava.
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