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・ Josef Moc
・ Josef Kemr
・ Josef Kiefel
・ Josef Kieffer
・ Josef Kittler
・ Josef Kitzmüller
・ Josef Kjellgren
・ Josef Klapuch
・ Josef Klaus
・ Josef Klehr
・ Josef Kleisl
・ Josef Kling
・ Josef Klička
・ Josef Kloimstein
・ Josef Klose
Josef Knap
・ Josef Knottenbelt
・ Josef Knubel
・ Josef Kociok
・ Josef Kodíček
・ Josef Kohler
・ Josef Kollmer
・ Josef Komarek
・ Josef Kompalla
・ Josef Konstantin Beer
・ Josef Kopecký
・ Josef Kopta
・ Josef Korbel
・ Josef Korbel School of International Studies
・ Josef Kotin


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Josef Knap : ウィキペディア英語版
Josef Knap
Josef Knap (July 28, 1900 – December 13, 1973) was a Czech writer, poet and literary critic.
Born in Podůlší by Jičín, Knap studied at the Classical Grammar school until 1919. He graduated from the College of Philosophy at Charles University in Prague in 1924, with a degree in modern literature. During World War I and World War II, he traveled throughout Europe visiting countries including Germany, Sweden, Norway, Italy and France. From 1925 he worked in the theater department of the National Museum of Czechoslovakia. He stayed there until 1951, eventually becoming the museum's administrator. His time there was interrupted by the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia, which he spent in Arbeitsansatz.
Because of theological themes in his work, Knap became a victims of the political persecution of Catholic intellectuals by the Communist government in the 1950s. In 1952, he was condemned without any evidence to eleven years in prison, but was released early in 1955 (he was pardoned in 1967 during a brief period of political freedom). After his release he worked as a building laborer, and later in the Memorial of National Literature. In the 1960s, he focused on the history of theater groups. Based on his work in this area, he published ''Umělcové na pouti'' (Czech ''Traveling artists'') in 1961.
Knap died in Prague and is buried in Železnice by Jičín. In 1997, his memoirs were published under the name ''Bez poslední kapitoly'' (Czech ''Without the last chapter'').
==Works==
Knap's writings combine realistic and impressionistic elements. His inspiration came from northern European authors and some Czech writers, above all Antal Stašek, Karel Václav Rais and the impressionist Fráňa Šrámek. He devoted his work to rural themes.

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