Saturday, April 5, 2008

Prague, quite the delay = a long post

Waiting for a ride back to Austria
Random picture from our wine tour at Klosterneuberg
Just preparing myself for THREE hours of Opera...
Waiting for the start of Don Giovanni. Notice how everything is baby blue and gold? Normally or traditionally opera's are red velvet. But Prague's is special.
Gorgeous theater nonetheless.
Might have been before the Theater, ya know to help with the preparation. haha Actually this is one of our free nights. I was really hungry and didn't want to eat in the touristy part of Prague so we made an excursion out of Wenceslas Square and into the surrounding neighborhood. Luckily we found this place where they served me meat, meat dumplings with meat and more meat. For about six euros! and the Beer wasn't even a dollar!!
Franz Kafka coming out of his shell
Spanish Synagogue. We made an entire morning tour themed Jewish Life in Prague. There were six stops in all ranging from the Jewish cemetery, the Holocaust memorial of Czech Jews that died in concentration camps and throughout the war. An children's art museum, with art from a concentration camp as a form of release from everyday torture of trying to survive. THen Jewish celebrations, and rituals and Jewish life today. Pretty educational stuff.This is the oldest active synagogue in the world. Here we learned about specific symbols in the synagogue, decorative elements and ritual during the ceremony.
I can't read Czech!?
Der Wallenstein! Well I think- I can't remember if it was built because if Schiller's play or if Schiller's play was written after the wall went up? It's supposed to symbolize a wall constructed from human beings. Though I could be totally wrong.
Church in the Wallenstein Square and Palace area. The Church is constantly changing owners; between State and Church. The Church says it should be the rightful owner because it is a house of God. The State says it should be the rightful owner because of all the Kings and Queens (political leaders) that are buried there (over 1,500 plus priests and bishops) and because of it's past State or Political significance.
Hand painted stained glass! Think about it!
Shot of the Cathedral from the entrance.
Prague from the Belvedere ( = beautiful view!)
Walking to Wallenstein Square/Palace
Kepler was a Physicist and the other guy... ... Point is that the first University in Europe was founded in Prague and this monumental founding so to speak, influenced many counter revolutions against communism and state tyranny.
Cubism
Our tour guide said the Czechs liked Stalin so much the hung him out to dry with the laundry. This monument also refers to a student revolution that forced politicians and rich statement literally out of the windows of high buildings to their deaths.
Charles' Bridge. See how the part at the bottom is especially shiny; everybody rubs it and the many other statues on the bridge for good luck.
That's the group, cept for the guy on the far far left in the hat... no body knows him
Vlatava River looking up to Wallenstein Palace

Philharmonic
Baroque architecture
The most famous thing in Prague. At every hour the clock goes off and then the whole coo coo thing happens with the apostles and they spin around and come out for a little bit. It was terribly anticlimatic compared to the amount of people that were there to see it happen. I thought it was going to be grandiose with fire works or something. Nope just a coo coo clock.
Church in the Easter market
I guess the more three dimensional one's art the more modern.
A look out tower part of the old city wall of Prague
Referring to Cubism. It's a restaurant near this building below.More cubism- I think the first modern cubist house ever built but don't quote me on that.
The enormous crowds in Prague. Way too many tourists there, way too many.
A Franciscan church close to where we were staying. An interesting fact is that during the Calvinist and Protestant Reformations many Catholic churches were forced to reform or completely change to Calvinist or Protestant churches. But then after sometime and labor they reformed (reform might not be the right word but in German our tour guide was using the verb reformieren a lot so...) back to Catholicism. This church was an example of this process.
King Wenceslas trying to ride a dead horse. Modern art in a shopping mall!
Erin after we ate too much at a Czech buffet style restaurant!
Wenceslas Square, our Hotel is to the left but ya can't really see it.
Comfy cozy little rooms

First arriving-

So in Prague we toured the tourist part of the city with our tour guide Jarislav. He was quite a character and tried to give us historical info as well as where the best pubs and clubs were. Just for balance ya know. Along with the walks we saw some operas. I hadn't seen an opera before coming to Prague but I was excited to see the building and the music and the atmosphere even if I wasn't excited about the Singing and crowd that went with it. We saw Don Giovanni and Le nozze de Figaro in Prague. Both are Mozart pieces and Don Giovanni actually premiered in the theater we went to and even more amazing Mozart himself was the Conductor for the premier in the very building we saw it in. Pretty sweet huh? Prague was fun. We stayed at a Jungendstil hotel- for any of you who've heard of Art Nouveau, this was it. The Grand Hotel Evropa. the 'v' is really a 'u' but no one in my class believed me. Anyway our Professor referred to it as Faded Glory but wasn't impressed with the Asbestos behind her toilette that she had to show me to make sure to let everyone know that she wasn't lying. But I have no clue what asbestos looks like. I agreed nonetheless. It's a beautiful town and I can say that I did enjoy myself.

Back in Vienna:
Just saw Lukas Baerfuss' (yes Bare foot!) Die Probe. It was very good. It's a modern ethical piece that destabilizes family life. Die Probe as a noun refers to many things in German, but in this context means a DNA test. From there the Drama ensues and tangles and of course twists too. The set was outstanding and constructed with many mirrors and a duplicate set to truly confuse the heck out of someone. It took my at least twenty minutes to figure out what was a duplicate and what was reflection. All in all the performance was really good and it was an opportunity to see another theater in Vienna, The Akadamie Theater.

The classes I'm taking at the Uni Wien are pretty interesting classes. One is in the Philosophy department and it's called (get ready): Natur des Menschen u. Willensfreiheit - Die Auffassung des Menschen im östlichen u. im westl. Denken. (this is the translation Human nature and freedom of will - The interpretation of human being in eastern & western philosophy) It seems overwhelming just from the title but after the first day of class I was truly relieved. The Professor takes the issues very slowly and is not a native German speaker so she makes sure to annunciate. We're reading a ton of Karl Jaspers (One of the foremost Politicians against NationalSocialism and took a large part in the forming of Germany after the second World War) for the first part and the second focuses on eastern thinking, and eastern Philosophers. It's really good stuff.

The other class is called Elfriede Jelinek: Eine Einfuehrung in ihrer Wirk -Elfriede Jelinek: an introduction to her work. She's pretty controversial and is very often compared to another Austrian writer (even though she hates the comparison!) that I like very much, Thomas Bernhard (I've read a couple pieces from him and seen one of his plays). Anyhoo she's a 2nd wave feminist and just won the Nobel prize for literature. Though she couldn't accept it in person because she has a fear of traveling and social anxiety. She seems to be a very interesting person but I'm not sure how I'll like her work, because it's extremely graphic and almost everything has to do with sexuality. We'll also see- I'm also gonna sit in on a Heidegger class just in case I really don't end up liking the Jelinek stuff.So I showed up to the class and it seemed to go pretty good to. It's also in the Philosophy department but seems more of a literature and analysis course to me. Should also be very interesting.

I would like to get credit for both the classes if everything works out. I'll have the entire month of June (Gisela's and the Austrian history course end in May at the Austro American Institut) to work on writing my final papers to receive the credits and I think they'll have to transfer over to Mac. If nothing else they'll be fun.

Oh, what's weird is that I just went to this Jelinek class for the first meeting on the 2nd of april and I'm already trying to figure what my classes are going to be for next semester. It seems so weird, first of all to be a senior and secondly to already be thinking about the fall semester when I've barely had a class or two at the Uni Wien here (though my Austro American Institute classes have been running for a while now... so maybe not too weird). Anyhoo
Here's what my schedule should look like in the fall:

MWF 9:40 - 10:40am German 306: Intro to German Studies (with Rachael Huener)
MWF 10:50 - 11:50am German 363: Romanticism (with David Martyn)

MWF 12 - 1pm Phil 120: Intro to Symbolic Logic
TR 9:40 - 11:10am Phil 362: Philosophy of Mind

Pretty con(dense)d huh? I want to try and see how the double major might work out; Philosophy/ German Studies Double Major sounds good to me. I was told by someone when I was talking about the possibility of double majors, that I couldn't just be a German Studies major. I just responded "sure I can!" But Two for the price of one as they say though I know it's not going to be easy, that's for sure. I'll have two senior seminars in my spring semester but the challenge is something I'm looking forward to strangely enough.

Well that's about it- after fighting a bout of Food poisoning I'm a little pooped out. hahah get it!? uh.. .... ....
Well I guess I'm not sure, but I think I can be pretty certain. I just sat and watched movies and tried to wait it out. I'm feeling much better today though I'm still trying to get my feet underneath me. I need to get something to eat but I'm not too sure what that'll do to me. But enough of the details- It's a beautiful Saturday in Vienna!

1 comment:

Loren Keisling said...

Dude! Are you sure you're not in Ethiopia? You're looking quite famished! Maybe its just the diarrhea. Suggestion; maybe layoff the hippie food for a bit, or at least split real food with it half-and-half. We'll have to swell you up when you get back to the states! I was just checkin up on your blog. Thought I might do something different and use the website for its intended purpose. Shout me a hollar, youngin. Hope all is well. Love you much.

Peace easy