Take a pick: There are analyses of Švejk, but also Švejk in analyses of other subjects.
A. Analyses of Švejk
On Hašek’s The Good Soldier Švejk
Ian Johnston
"What Hašek is ridiculing here lies close to the heart of any complex modern institution."
Tropos Kynikos: Jaroslav Hašek's The Good Soldier Švejk
Peter Steiner
Originally published in 1994 in "an obscure Prague"journal", the authors says.
(As it turns out, it was published as The Cynic Hero: Jaroslav Hašek's The Good Soldier Švejk
in Litteraria Pragensia - Roč. [vol.] 4, č. [#] 8. - 1994. - S.[pp] 48-91.)
Four years later it appeared in the International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication
Poetics Today 19:4 (1998), pp.469-98 .
With some additional introductory material it became
the first chapter of Peter Steiner's book The Deserts of Bohemia: Czech Fiction and Its Social Context
reproduced here by permission from the author and the publisher, Cornell University Press:
"Like Diogenes, Švejk lingers at the margins of an unfriendly society against which he is defending his independent existence."
Švejk: A Hero For Our Time
Zenny K. Sadlon
"The Czech and Slovak 20th Century in Retrospect: 1918-1938" Conference, March 2-3, 2001:
"The spreading of absurdity is a key element upon which Mike Joyce and I rest our prediction that Švejk will become a household word even in the United States and other Anglophone countries at last, just as Catch 22 has."
Imperium Stupidum: Švejk, Satire, Sabotage
Erica Weitzman
"Law and Literature, Summer 2006, Vol. 18, No. 2, Pages 117–148
"This article argues that the satire of Švejk lies less in the irreverence and humor of its content than in its deep structural mechanisms of repetition, delay, and non-resistance pushed to the point of absurdity."
Jaroslav Hašek's "Good Soldier Švejk" and "Aesop"
The Slav v. The Slave — Two Literal Fools — Speak Truth to Power
A Comparison of Subversive Narrative Strategies in "Aesop without Morals" and Jaroslav Hašek's "The Good Soldier Švejk."
Danusha V. Goska
"... Aesop struck me as what black people might call a 'white man's nigger;' struck me as a variation of Polish-American playwright Arthur Miller's Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman. Of Švejk and Aesop, Švejk is the more subversive narrator; his is the more subversive narrative."
Hašek's Good Soldier Švejk as a Picaresque Novel
Thomas Kovach
Germano-Slavica, Spring 1984, Vol. IV, No. 5, pp. 251-264:
"Many critics have compared Švejk to other 'mythic' figures of Western literature, such as Don Quixote, Faust, or (more appropriately) Sancho Panza."
Jaroslav Hašek 1883-1983
Proceedings of the International Hašek Symposion Bamberg, June 25-28, 1983.
[West Slavic Contributions - Westslavische Beiträge vol. 1]
PETER LANG Frankfurt am Main - Bern - New York - Paris, 1989.
"Hašek is the most widely acclaimed (and disputed) Czech author, and also the Czech writer whose twisted path toward acceptance is worth the attention not only of 'Haskologists', but also of theoreticians of literature, as this collection of essays tries to prove."
The Good Soldier Švejk
Macdonald Daly
New Internationalist Classic Review, issue 262 - December 1994 (The fifth and last review down on the page.)
"...being the book that teaches us who makes history ... The critic JP Stern has called The Good Soldier Švejk 'the only genuine popular creation of modern European literature;'"
On the Integrity of the Good Soldier Schweik
J. P. Stern
Forum for Modern Language Studies, II(1):14-24, 1966 - Court of the University of St Andrews, Oxford
B. Švejk in Analyses
of other subjects
Jaroslaw Hašek, The Good Soldier Švejk // Schizoanalysis (2018)
Lecture by Andrey Velikanov
at the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art
Living in the iron cage of performance management: exit the street level bureaucrat, enter the good soldier Švejk? (original title)
S. White, and D. Wastell, K. Broadhurst, S. Peckover, D. Davey, and A. Pithouse
International Journal of Social Welfare, Special Issue, 2009
The Phantom of the Good Soldier Švejk in the Czech Army Accession to NATO (2001–2002)
Hana Cervinkova
International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, Volume 22, Number 3 / September, 2009
"The article shows how the current official efforts at changing the image of the Czech military focus on the obliteration of Švejk’s cultural idiom, bringing him so frequently to the public discourse that they produce a phantom-like effect in which Švejk has come to haunt the process directed at his expurgation."
The Good Dissident Švejk: An exploration of Czech morality and cultural survival
Heidi Bludau
Kosmas, 22.2 (Spring 2009)
reproduced here by permission of the author and the publisher
"The ideal Czech dissident is not Havel or Palach or even Hus but Švejk, the fat, beer-loving, bumbling, self-proclaimed, certified idiot of a soldier. When Czechs resist a political power, Švejk comes back to life. As the anti-hero of the beloved and famed novel by Jaroslav Hašek, Švejk represents the Czech spirit of resistance."
Perverted Research and the Political Imagination - The Trial of the Good Scholar Švejk
Paul A. Taylor
European Political Science, Volume 7, Number 3, August 2008 , pp. 335-351(17)
"The Research Assessment Exercise and its successor - the Research Excellence Framework - are examined as contemporary examples of a perversion of academic discourse in British universities that threatens to spread to the rest of Europe."
Švejkian Geopolitics: Subversive Obedience in Central Europe
Merje Kuus
Geopolitics, Volume 13, Number 2, April 2008 , pp. 257-277(21), Routledge
By foregrounding Švejkian absurd obedience, which is nonetheless highly subversive, the article contributes to a better understanding of popular geopolitics, resistance geopolitics, and more broadly, the role of human agency in geopolitical discourses.
Czech foreign policy: Farewell to Švejk
Robert Schuster
The Analyst - Central and Eastern European Review - English Edition (02/2007), pp. 47-56.
"For many years Czech foreign policy was best characterized by the attitude represented by the protagonist of Jaroslav Hašek’s novel The Good Soldier Švejk: namely, that it is best to avoid conflicts altogether, but that if they do become unavoidable, then they are to be endured with good humour or with an effort to somehow survive the situation.In this respect, the decision by the centre-right government of Mirek Topolánek to approve construction of an American radar station on Czech territory can be seen as a paradigm shift."
History Comes to You: Kafka, Švejk, and The Butcher’s Wife: Postcommunism, Postcolonialism and Central Europe
Nikola Petkovic
History of the Literary Cultures of East Central Europe: Junctions and Disjunctions in the 19th and 20th Centuries VOLUME II,
ed. Marcel Cornis-Pope and John Neubauer, John Benjamin Press, 2006, pp. 376-389
The Good Soldier Švejk and a Sociological Account of National Identification
Jaroslaw Kilias
Polish Sociological Review 2(150), 2005, pp. 163-179
"The author proposes a conceptual framework for an account of nationality which respects the multidimensional nature of the nation and hence the contextual and multi-level nature of national identification. To illustrate his claims, the author quotes Jaroslav Hassek’s The Good Soldier Svejk."
Monitoring, Rules, and the Control Paradox: Can the Good Soldier Švejk Be Trusted?
Gary J. Miller
In Trust and Distrust in Organizations: Dilemmas and Approaches
Roderick M. Kramer and Karen S. Cook, ed. Russell Sage Foundation, New York, N.Y., 2004, pp. 99-127.
Criminal Apprehensions: Prague Minorities And the Habsburg Legal System in Jaroslav Hašek's
the Good Soldier Švejk and Franz Kafka's the Trial
Jenifer Cushman
In Rodopi Perspectives on Modern Literature, Literature and Law, Volume 30, Edited by Michael J. Meyer. , Amsterdam/New York, NY, 2004, VIII,pp. 51-65(15)
"Indeed, there is a sanctuary space in Hašek's text for those "in the know," a comfort zone that Kafka does not provide in his 'deterritorialized' writing; Josef Švejk is able to evade public authority through word play, but Josef K. is ultimately convicted by his 'criminal apprehension,' his guilty conscience in the inhuman system."
Looking for the Good Soldier, Švejk: Alternative Modalities of Resistance in the Contemporary Workplace
Peter Fleming, Graham Sewell
Sociology, Volume 36, Issue 4, November 2002, pp 857-873:
"... Švejk never pulled his cons, ruses and stunts at the expense of his 'comrades', his hapless fellow foot soldiers ..."
Conversation – Strategies of Understanding and Pseudo-Understanding
Radka Vlahova (*1954–†2021)
In Стил (Style), Volume 1, pp. 165-172, The International Association Style, 2002
The presentation of interactive language use as cognitive is also a model of the type “understanding as pseudo-understanding”. This kind of language use could be called“the Švejk model”.
Instrumental psychosis: the Good Soldier Švejk syndrome
P Tyrer, N Babidge, J Emmanuel, N Yarger and M Ranger
Department of Public Mental Health, Division of Neuroscience and Psychological Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, London, UK.
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol 94, Issue 1 22-25, January 2001
The Good Soldier Švejk and after: the comic tradition in Czech film
Peter Hames
100 years of European cinema: Entertainment of Ideology?, ed. Diana Holmes, Allison Smith, Manchester University Press, 2000, pp. 64-76
The politics and hermeneutics of anarchist satire: Jaroslav Hašek's The good soldier Švejk
John Snyder
Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory, Volume 2, Issue 4 May 1991, pages 289 - 301, Routledge
Humbuggery and Manipulation: The Art of Leadership
by
F. G. Bailey
Review author[s]: Malcolm Ruel
Man, New Series, Vol. 25, No. 3 (Sep., 1990), pp. 543-544
"... has several revealing pages on what Švejk reveals about organizations." - Gary Miller
Švejk Don Quixote Jesus Christ
Gaifman, Hana Arie:
In Foundations of Semiotics, From Sign to Text: A Semiotic View of Communication
YishaiTobin, ed. , Amsterdam, Netherlands. Series No: 20. Amsterdam: Benjamins, 1989, 191-213.