Mocní? a bezmocní? [The Powerful? and the Helpless?]

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Miroslav VANĚK (ed.): The Powerful? and the Helpless? The book consists of ten essays which derive from the publication „Victors? Vanquished? Political Elites and Dissidents during the Period of So-Called Normalization – Historical Interviews“. Their authors, researchers and associates of the Institute for Contemporary History, analyze, from various points of views, a vast material in form of dozens life histories of ex-dissidents and communist officials gathered with the oral history method.

The interpretations aren‘t mere summaries of narators‘ testimonies. They have no intention of correcting the narrators or convicting them of consciously or uncousiously told untruth, nor are they trying to extract some sort of generalisations out of their testimonies. The interpretations‘ main goal is to reach an in-depth understanding of the stories or happenings followed, i.e. to comprehend the complexity of events in our contemporary history.

The ten interpretations bring the historians and wider public interested in contemporary history an opportunity to get acquainted with individual viewpoints about the character and development of the so-called normalization period in ex-Czechoslovakia. The readers can see for themselves that one interview can lead to different results according to the various points of view of an interpretation (and an interpreter)


 


Demokratická revoluce 1989 Československo 1968.cz Němečtí odpůrci nacismu v Československu Akademie věd v ohrožení

Current events in picture

Director of the Institute for Contemporary History Oldřich Tůma starts the proceedings on 20 November. The picture further shows the participants of the first panel called “The Struggle for East-Central Europe as a Primary Cause of the Cold War?” From left to right: Michael Hopkins, Benjamin Frommer (Chair), Vít Smetana, László Borhi and Rolf Steininger.
Prime Minister Jan Fischer awarding Prof. Mark Kramer with the Karel Kramář Memorial Medal.
The Prime Minister is congratulating Thomas Blanton, the director of the National Security Archive. Further from left to right are: Prof. Alex Pravda (Oxford University), Prof. Mark Kramer (Harvard University), Prof. Vilém Prečan (Czechoslovak Documentary Centre), Prof. William Taubman (Amherst College) and Michael Dockrill – husband of Prof. Saki Dockrill who was awarded in memoriam.

International conference (19-21 November 2009) about the role played by East-Central Europe in the Cold War.

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