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Prague Spring as a Laboratory [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 306 pages, aukštis x plotis: 232x155 mm, weight: 642 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2019
  • Leidėjas: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG
  • ISBN-10: 352535598X
  • ISBN-13: 9783525355985
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 306 pages, aukštis x plotis: 232x155 mm, weight: 642 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2019
  • Leidėjas: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG
  • ISBN-10: 352535598X
  • ISBN-13: 9783525355985
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Retrospectively, the Prague Spring appears to have been a coherent but unsuccessful experiment in finding a synthesis of Western democracy and socialism. However, this perspective ignores that different groups and individuals participated in these developments and shaped the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia with their completely varying professional, generational, national, and gender-specific experiences. What appears retrospectively as a goal-oriented reform movement or as an 'interrupted revolution' looked in the eyes of the protagonists rather like the situation in a laboratory, where they worked on new syntheses with uncertain results. The volume focuses on the protagonists' ideas of politics, society, and their reform plans. Of particular interest is the question which new thoughts about the interrelation of politics, science, economics, and arts were developed in Czechoslovakia.
The Prague Spring as a Laboratory 1(6)
Martin Schulze Wessel
I Cultural Patterns
Temporal Order during the Prague Spring
7(12)
Martin Schulze Wessel
1968 as a "Double Revolution:" Entanglements between East and West
19(16)
Thomas M. Bohn
II Groups of Agents
Socialism at the Crossroads: Czechoslovak Reform Communism and the Contradictions of Socialist Governance
35(18)
Vitezslav Sommer
Between a New System and Capitalist Rules: The Czechoslovak Economic Reform Discussion and the Question of the Autonomy of the Socialist Economy
53(14)
Johannes Gleixner
The Central Brain of Society? The Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences and the Social Changes of the Second Half of the 1960s
67(16)
Martin Franc
The Slovak Academy of Sciences in the Reform Process: Visions, Expectations and Demands
83(16)
Adam Hudek
Radical Democrats between Reform and Revolution
99(18)
Jan Mervart
Historical Bloc and Revolution: The Radical Democratic Interpretation of the Prague Spring of 1968
117(26)
Ivan Landa
A Long Evangelical Spring? The Czech Protestant Milieu and Communist Reformers between 1963 and 1977
143(20)
Ondfej Matejka
Too Many Words? Prague Spring Writers in the Eyes of Czechoslovak Political Leaders of 1968
163(16)
Peter Bugge
III Mediatization
"Dear Comrade Dubcek" Between a Shift towards Civility and a New Personality Cult
179(18)
Marina Zavackd
From "Freedom Fighters" to "Responsible Opposition:" The Czechoslovak Service of Radio Free Europe and the Prague Spring
197(16)
Anna Bischof
The Czechoslovak Monthly Journal "Im Herzen Europas" and the Prague Spring
213(14)
Helene Leclerc
The Search for the "Czechoslovak Model:" Abandoning the Soviet Path and Pioneering Socialism for Highly Developed European Nations
227(16)
Darina Volf
IV Retrospective Interpretation and Its Agents
The Prague Spring of 1968 as "Master Narrative:" Emergence, Continuity, and Transformation
243(18)
Zdenek Nebfensky
Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter in Political Reform Efforts: On the Cyclical Nature of Individual Commitment in the Work of Ludvik Vaculik
261(16)
Nora Schmidt
Interpreting the Prague Spring: Disillusion, Melancholia, and the Waning of the Left
277(16)
Pavel Koldf
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms 293(2)
Index of Personal Names 295(8)
Contributors 303
Martin Schulze Wessel is Professor of Eastern European History at the Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich, Gremany. He specializes in the history of religion in Eastern and East Central Europe, the history of empires in Eastern Europe, and historiography and historical thought in Russia.