Social and Political Aspects of Existence and Development of Independent Music Genres and Trends in the Czech Republic from the sixties until 1989

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(Miroslav Vaněk, Grant Agency of the ASCR, 2006-2008)
The project as submitted aims to increase our knowledge about the penetration of new music forms and genres — rock music in particular — into the Czech milieu, the local distribution and enrichment of such music by way of original production from the 1960s to 1989. The project’s priority is to look at how this type of music affected two or three generations of young people, how their style of life and their approach was affected under the conditions of a totalitarian regime that despised the existence and attempted to deny it by ideological arguments while attempting to limit these phenomena by means of power. The project also aims to specify how the development interconnected with the growing trends and tendencies of independent thinking and demonstration inside the younger generations of Czech society.

 


Demokratická revoluce 1989 Československo 1968.cz Němečtí odpůrci nacismu v Československu výzkumný projekt KSČ a bolševismus Disappeared Science Europeana

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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