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・ Lubomirski Ramparts
・ Lubomirski's Rebellion
・ Lubomirskia baicalensis
・ Lubomirskiidae
・ Luboml
・ Lubomyr Husar
・ Lubomyr Kuzmak
・ Lubomyr Luciuk
・ Lubomyr Melnyk
・ Lubomyr Romankiw
・ Lubomyra
・ Lubomyśl
・ Lubomyśle
・ Lubomír Beneš
・ Lubomír Blaha
Lubomír Doležel
・ Lubomír Dvořák
・ Lubomír Havlák
・ Lubomír Kubica
・ Lubomír Lipský
・ Lubomír Myšák
・ Lubomír Nácovský
・ Lubomír Nádeníček
・ Lubomír Pokluda
・ Lubomír Puček
・ Lubomír Tomeček
・ Lubomír Vambera
・ Lubomír Vlk
・ Lubomír Vosátko
・ Lubomír Zajíček


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Lubomír Doležel : ウィキペディア英語版
Lubomír Doležel
Lubomír Doležel (born October 3, 1922, Lesnice〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.slovnikceskeliteratury.cz/showContent.jsp?docId=1850 )〕) is a Czech literary theorist and one of the founders of the so-called fictional worlds theory.
== Life, work, and academic career ==

Doležel was educated at Charles University in Prague and received his CSc (roughly equivalent to a PhD) in Slavic Philology from the Institute of the Czech Language of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. Many of his teachers and mentors were representatives of the so-called Prague School, an internationally recognized and influential centre of inter-war structuralist and semiotic thought. The spirit of the Prague School is evident in Dolezel's PhD thesis ''On the Style of Modern Czech Prose Fiction'' (published in Czech in 1960) and inspires his later work. In the 1960s Dolezel worked concurrently as research fellow in the Institute of Czech Language and as assistant, and later associate, professor of the Philosophical Faculty of Charles University. He was engaged primarily in the application of mathematics (especially statistics), information theory and cybernetics to the study of language and literature. He founded and co-edited a series entitled ''Prague Studies in Mathematical Linguistics''.〔
In 1965, Doležel was invited as visiting professor to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where he stayed till 1968. He co-edited (with Richard W. Bailey) a collection of studies ''Statistics and Style'' (American Elsevier, 1969). After his return to Prague he was appointed research fellow of the Institute of Czech Literature of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, but in the fall of 1968 he left his native land after the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. He was invited to the University of Toronto as visiting professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, where he later became full professor. He established the study of Czech language and literature at the university. In 1982 he was cross-appointed to the Centre for Comparative Literature. His main research interest has been the theory of literature, with a focus on narrative (narratology). Doležel's theoretical position was strongly influenced by analytic philosophy, especially by the conceptual framework of possible worlds. On his retirement in 1988, the Centre organized an international conference "Fictions and Worlds".〔
Doležel has read papers at many North American and European universities and international conferences. He was visiting professor at the University of Amsterdam, University of Munich and Charles University. He published numerous papers on the history of poetics, narratology and fictional semantics, and a couple of books on the same subjects.〔

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