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SpecialChildren of the Revolution: politics and writing in today’s Czech Republic

28-10-2010 02:01 | David Vaughan

A few days ago Radio Prague and the Czech Literature Portal, this country’s foremost website promoting Czech literature abroad, got together to hold the first of a series of public literary discussions. David Vaughan’s guests were two of the Czech Republic’s best known literary figures, the novelist Petra Hůlová and the critic and translator Martin Machovec. They were joined by an international audience at one of Prague’s most atmospheric literary dens, the Shakespeare and Sons bookshop, tucked away in one of the ancient houses in Prague’s Lesser Quarter. The subject was politics and literature; twenty years after the fall of communism, are the two in any way compatible here in the Czech context?  More

One on OneMisha Glenny - UK writer with close ties to Prague

25-10-2010 13:39 | Ian Willoughby

Misha Glenny The English journalist and writer Misha Glenny is perhaps best known for his work covering the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the hit 2008 book McMafia. His first book The Rebirth of History, published in 1990, focused on the post-communist political landscape of Eastern Europe, including Czechoslovakia, a country with which he had a close association. Indeed, Glenny had studied Czech in Prague, and remembers with fondness his time here in the early ‘80s. When we spoke recently at the close of the Forum 2000 conference in the city, he recalled his very first visit, towards the end of 1980. More

Current AffairsNewly uncovered footage shows how Communists wanted to depict events of ‘89

10-09-2010 14:42 | Jan Velinger

Historians at the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes have announced they recently uncovered previously unknown video footage in the archives on the events of 1989. Footage shot – and heavily manipulated - by the former regime’s secret police, the StB. Carefully presented images and a propagandistic voice-over in the “documentary” were meant to give a diametrically different picture of public demonstrations which shook the country 21 years ago, suggesting they were a provocation and a sham. Swiftly overcome by events, though, the Communists soon shelved the material, and it was subsequently forgotten.  More

Current AffairsItalia ’90 a World Cup to remember for Czechoslovak fans able to travel freely after fall of communism

08-06-2010 15:18 | Ian Willoughby

Czech team at the 1990 World Cup, photo: CTK With just days remaining until the World Cup kicks off in South Africa, football fever is beginning to grip fans around the globe. The Czech Republic failed to qualify this year, but many will have fond memories of the 1990 World Cup in Italy, when supporters from Czechoslovakia were finally able to travel freely to a major soccer tournament.  More

Current AffairsGeneration 89 meets to debate the past and plan the future

27-04-2010 15:24 | Daniela Lazarová

Generation 89, currently underway in four European capitals, is a project intended to bring together young people from different backgrounds and different experiences to debate their common future in the European Union. Participants from nine EU member states are meeting in Bucharest, Brussels, Prague and Warsaw to talk about where they came from and where they want to go. The project was initiated by the Romanian Cultural Institute to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of communism in Eastern Europe and co-financed by the European Commission. Dan Mitra Duta, the project manager, explains the idea behind it.  More

Czech Books“We were criminally naïve”: a former Czech PM looks back to the Velvet Revolution

31-01-2010 02:01 | David Vaughan

Petr Pithart, photo: David Vaughan Since the fall of communism, Petr Pithart has been a central Czech political figure. As one of the first people to sign the human rights manifesto, Charter 77, he spent the last years of the communist regime as a political dissident. But as the regime collapsed in November 1989, he shot to prominence – firstly in Civic Forum, which brought together those fighting for an end to one-party rule, and then as the first post-communist prime minister of the Czech part of the Czechoslovak federation. Later he went on to be chairman of the Czech Senate and today he serves as the Senate’s deputy chairman. Senator Pithart has just published a book with the simple title “1989”, in which he reflects on the events and the legacy of the time. Surprisingly the book is one of the first studies to be written by a prominent actor in the Velvet Revolution. The book is striking for the openness with which it discusses the mistakes that were made, mistakes that in Pithart’s view, hastened the split of Czechoslovakia and sowed the seeds for many of the political problems in the Czech Republic today. When I went to see Senator Pithart, he began by telling me that he was drawn into the fray of politics more or less by chance. More

Current Affairs20 years after, Václav Havel seen as key figure in transition to democracy

29-12-2009 17:11 | Jan Richter

Václav Havel’s inauguration, photo: CTK In a memorable moment of history, dissent and playwright Václav Havel was elected the first post-communist president of Czechoslovakia 20 years ago. His inauguration put the final seal on the country’s road to democracy. Two decades later, most Czechs believe Mr Havel’s role in the process was crucial.  More

Current AffairsInternational theatre project reflecting on two decades of freedom culminates at Prague’s Archa on Friday

10-12-2009 16:32 | Ian Willoughby

Svoboda? Svoboda! (Freedom? Freedom!) is the name of an international theatre project that culminates at Prague’s Archa theatre on Friday night. Involving theatre groups and contemporary history institutes from the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Germany, the show provides a forum for examination of the states’ recent communist past, and asks – what kind of freedom did they achieve in 20 years? Ahead of Friday’s event, I found out more from the director of Divadlo Archa, Ondřej Hrab. More

ArtsNew book collects posters that helped shape 1989’s Velvet Revolution

27-11-2009 15:27 | Ian Willoughby

Exactly 20 years ago, during the Velvet Revolution, the country was flooded with posters, both home-produced and professionally printed, calling for change. They bore slogans like Free Elections, Teacher You Don’t Have to Lie to Us Anymore, and Havel to the Castle. Now many of those posters have been gathered in a fascinating new book.  More

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