Editorial and distribution section

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The Institute of Contemporary History launched its publishing career at its foundation in cooperation with the Czechoslovak documentation centre at Scheinfeld. The first two items to roll off the printing presses were “The Charter of 77” (Charta 77) and “The Democratic Revolution” (Demokratická revoluce), both of which had been prepared by members of the documentation centre still in exile at Scheinfeld. These were followed by a joint publication on the fate of Jews in the Protectorate. Then, in 1992, the first fruits of research projects were ready to be issued in book form and the enterprise has continued ever since. In some cases results have been published at the Institute’s own expense, and in others with the aid of the Konrad Adenauer Foundation or grants from different sources.

With most publications, the Editorial and distribution section manages all stages of production from initial transcription of manuscripts to sub-editing to the final bookbinding, and, as far as the Institute’s own productions are concerned, these are published independently of the scientific and academic press. The book series “Notebooks of the Institute of Contemporary History” (Sešity USD; 41 volumes until the present), for instance, offers in a prescribed form partial studies and thematic collections of documents that have accrued from new archival research and is geared mainly towards the domestic academic market and centres for Czech Studies abroad. It is only larger monographs and source editions that have been published in cooperation with commercial publishing houses (Doplněk, Torst, Maxdorf, Prius, Dokořán) and these are aimed at the wider public.

Milena Janišová


 


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

Current events in picture

Bruce Lockhart Lecture at the Embassy of the United Kingdom on 5 June in the evening: Profesor Richard Overy (University of Exeter) lecturing on British political warfare and occupied Europe.
Photo: British Embassy
The first conference panel called The existence and challenges faced by the exile governments in London (part 1). Anticlockwise: Albert Kersten (University of Leyden), Chantal Kesteloot (Centre for Historical Research, Brussels), Anita J. Prazmowska (The London School of Economics and Political Science), Detlef Brandes (Heinrich-Heine-Universität, Düsseldorf), Mark Cornwall (chair; University of Southampton), Jan Bečka (Charles University – Faculty of Social Sciences)
The second conference panel called The existence and challenges faced by the exile governments in London (part 2). From left to right: Vít Smetana (conference co-ordinator; Institute for Contemporary History, Prague), Jiří Ellinger (chair; Foreign Ministry, Prague), Edita Ivaničková (The Institute of History, Bratislava), Radoslaw Zurawski vel Grajewski (Lodz University), Viktoria Vasilenko (Belgorod State University)

The international conference CZECHOSLOVAKIA AND THE OTHER OCCUPIED NATIONS IN LONDON: The Story of the Exile Revisited after Seventy Years 6-7 June 2013

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