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Czech BooksDickens and the Good Soldier Švejk

11-02-2012 02:01 | David Vaughan

Here is a question for the Dickens bicentenary. What is the connection between the great 19th century English novelist and the best-loved Czech literary anti-hero? The answer is, surprisingly enough, that without Dickens we quite possibly wouldn’t have Švejk at all. David Vaughan looks at this and some other Czech links with Dickens in this week’s Czech Books. More

SpotlightA tale of two restaurants

30-11-2011 16:12 | Rosie Johnston

Pub ‘U Kalicha’ Hrabal’s book "I served the King of England" makes working in a restaurant sound very dramatic, and very glamorous. But the novel also suggests that such drama and glamour belong to a time now long gone. To find out whether this was true, I visited two of Prague’s most famous restaurants, to talk to their owners about their work from day-to-day. More

Czech HistoryJosef Lada – landscape painter and Švejk illustrator

01-11-2011 15:58 | Rosie Johnston

Josef Lada As one art critic once said, the paintings of Josef Lada accompany Czechs from cradle to grave. He is as well known for his illustrations of fairy tales and children’s readers as he is for his landscapes, which each Christmas are printed thousands of times over on the front of the nation’s Christmas cards. Lada was also the artist who gave the grinning, rotund Good Soldier Švejk his form. More

Czech HistoryThe world renowned writer and ‘folk hero’ Jaroslav Hašek

26-04-2011 11:42 | Coilin O'Connor

Jaroslav Hašek The Czech writer Jaroslav Hašek is best known today for his hilarious anti-war novel The Good Soldier Švejk. Hašek’s own biography, however, is perhaps just as farcical and action-packed as his most famous book. In this edition of Czech History, we look at the life and times of this world renowned author. More

Current AffairsFirst part of Czech classic The Good Soldier Švejk published 90 years ago

02-03-2011 15:28 | Jan Velinger

It has been 90 years since the publication of the first part of, Jaroslav Hašek’s The Good Soldier Švejk. The four-part novel (which Hašek failed to complete before his death at 40) introduced his good-natured protagonist famously reacting to the assassination of the archduke in Sarajevo in 1914. He asks his charwoman “Which Ferdinand, Mrs Muller? I know two...”, oblivious to the gravity of developments. The novel has long since been recognised as a satirical masterpiece, and has been translated into more than 50 languages. More

Current AffairsWomen get short end of stick in distribution of municipal budgets, survey finds

27-07-2010 10:27 | Sarah Borufka

Photo: CTK A fresh survey by the NGO Forum 50%, which strives for equal rights for both genders, suggests that towns and villages in the Czech Republic spend significantly more on men’s needs and interests than women’s. According to the survey, seven out of eight municipalities favored men in their budget distribution. In one case, only 18 percent of a town’s funds went to activities and resources for women. The author of the analysis, Marcela Adamusová, explains the main findings of the study.  More

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