The Czech concept of betrayal as an element of the Munich mythThis article explores the cultural significance of the “Munich myth”, focusing on the concept of “Western betrayal” and its connotations associated with the idea of destiny and sacrifice. It also examines how the myth influenced the formation of Czech national identity, especially during and shortly after the Second World War. Opening with an analysis of a poem by František Halas written in the midst of the Munich Conference, it also reviews a number of writings which increased the popularity of the ideas of betrayal and sacrifice and, as a result, have made them synonymous with the “Czech fate”: excerpts from the memoirs of Zdeněk Štĕpánek and Edvard Beneš, essays by Karel Kosík...
At the peripheries of memory: (Non-)memory about the past of Slovak Hungarians in twenty-first-centu...
The subject of elaboration is the correspondence by Halina and Kazimierz Wierzyński, preserved in th...
“Lies”, “Dirty Madness”, “Daylight Robbery”: How Henryk Sienkiewicz Verbalised Negative Judgments an...
The Czech concept of betrayal as an element of the Munich myth This article explores the cultural s...
Circus as parody of communism. Gargling with Tar by Jáchym TopolThis article deals with humanism in ...
In 2002 in the Czech Republic a very interesting phenomenon occured — an unknown young woman named P...
On the History of Absolute Failure: Criticism of Religion in the Essays of Josef Šafařík The articl...
Tradition and the practices of gender domination on the example of hutsul carollingThe Christmas cus...
“Wiping clean the slate of the past”. Reflections on the fringes of selected literary texts from Sla...
Ponašymu – the mixed language code of Těšín SilesiaThis article describes the development of the lin...
“(Y)et the faces of our souls are sad. lying on the carpet. howling. tormenting us.” (J. Mansztajn, ...
Andrzej Nowicki begann seine Philosophie der Kultur mit der Skizzierung einer atheistischen Perspekt...
West Slavic languages and English loanwords in the last two decades – an overview of grammar, lexic...
“Wiping clean the slate of the past”. Reflections on the fringes of selected literary texts from Sla...
Josef Váchal’s Spiritual World Through the Prism of the Year 1920 The article presents the spiritua...
At the peripheries of memory: (Non-)memory about the past of Slovak Hungarians in twenty-first-centu...
The subject of elaboration is the correspondence by Halina and Kazimierz Wierzyński, preserved in th...
“Lies”, “Dirty Madness”, “Daylight Robbery”: How Henryk Sienkiewicz Verbalised Negative Judgments an...
The Czech concept of betrayal as an element of the Munich myth This article explores the cultural s...
Circus as parody of communism. Gargling with Tar by Jáchym TopolThis article deals with humanism in ...
In 2002 in the Czech Republic a very interesting phenomenon occured — an unknown young woman named P...
On the History of Absolute Failure: Criticism of Religion in the Essays of Josef Šafařík The articl...
Tradition and the practices of gender domination on the example of hutsul carollingThe Christmas cus...
“Wiping clean the slate of the past”. Reflections on the fringes of selected literary texts from Sla...
Ponašymu – the mixed language code of Těšín SilesiaThis article describes the development of the lin...
“(Y)et the faces of our souls are sad. lying on the carpet. howling. tormenting us.” (J. Mansztajn, ...
Andrzej Nowicki begann seine Philosophie der Kultur mit der Skizzierung einer atheistischen Perspekt...
West Slavic languages and English loanwords in the last two decades – an overview of grammar, lexic...
“Wiping clean the slate of the past”. Reflections on the fringes of selected literary texts from Sla...
Josef Váchal’s Spiritual World Through the Prism of the Year 1920 The article presents the spiritua...
At the peripheries of memory: (Non-)memory about the past of Slovak Hungarians in twenty-first-centu...
The subject of elaboration is the correspondence by Halina and Kazimierz Wierzyński, preserved in th...
“Lies”, “Dirty Madness”, “Daylight Robbery”: How Henryk Sienkiewicz Verbalised Negative Judgments an...