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The end of Czechoslovakia / edited by Jirí Musil.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Budapest ; New York : Central European University Press ; New York : Distributed in the U.S. by Oxford University Press, 1995.Description: 1 online resource (x, 283 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0585372608
  • 9780585372600
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: End of Czechoslovakia.DDC classification:
  • 943.703 20
LOC classification:
  • DB2228.7 .E53 1995eb
Other classification:
  • 15.70
  • 89.40
Online resources:
Contents:
Czech and Slovak demography / Milan Kucera and Zdenek Pavlik -- Economic development and relations, 1918-89 / Václav Prucha -- Czech and Slovak society / Jirí Musil -- National consciousness and the common state / Jan Rychlik -- Slovakia in Czech national consciousness / Zdenek Suda -- Mutual perceptions in Czech-Slovak relationships / Petr Príhoda -- Slovak exceptionalism / Miroslav Kusý -- Political power-sharing in the interwar period / Alena Bartlová -- From autonomy to federation, 1938-89 / Petr Pithart.
Summary: "In The End of Czechoslovakia, scholars and practitioners from both sides of the divide, Czech and Slovak, as well as Western experts, take an in-depth look at the causes of Czechoslovakia's break-up, and seek to explain why a seemingly successful country should disintegrate so quickly after the collapse of the communist regime. Besides exploring the political processes leading to the split, the authors analyse the underlying social, economic and cultural differences between the two nations and examine the historical roots of the problems. Particular attention is paid to changing Czech and Slovak attitudes towards the common state and towards each other, from the heyday of the First Republic to the disillusionment of the post-1989 period." "On an international level, important lessons can be drawn from the failure of the Czechoslovak Federation. This multidisciplinary interpretation of the peaceful break-up of a state helps the reader to understand not only the deeper causes of the 'velvet divorce', but the phenomenon of contemporary nationalisms as a whole." --Book Jacket.
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"This book is the result of three workshops organized by the Central European University in the years 1992-3"--Page [ix].

Czech and Slovak demography / Milan Kucera and Zdenek Pavlik -- Economic development and relations, 1918-89 / Václav Prucha -- Czech and Slovak society / Jirí Musil -- National consciousness and the common state / Jan Rychlik -- Slovakia in Czech national consciousness / Zdenek Suda -- Mutual perceptions in Czech-Slovak relationships / Petr Príhoda -- Slovak exceptionalism / Miroslav Kusý -- Political power-sharing in the interwar period / Alena Bartlová -- From autonomy to federation, 1938-89 / Petr Pithart.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

"In The End of Czechoslovakia, scholars and practitioners from both sides of the divide, Czech and Slovak, as well as Western experts, take an in-depth look at the causes of Czechoslovakia's break-up, and seek to explain why a seemingly successful country should disintegrate so quickly after the collapse of the communist regime. Besides exploring the political processes leading to the split, the authors analyse the underlying social, economic and cultural differences between the two nations and examine the historical roots of the problems. Particular attention is paid to changing Czech and Slovak attitudes towards the common state and towards each other, from the heyday of the First Republic to the disillusionment of the post-1989 period." "On an international level, important lessons can be drawn from the failure of the Czechoslovak Federation. This multidisciplinary interpretation of the peaceful break-up of a state helps the reader to understand not only the deeper causes of the 'velvet divorce', but the phenomenon of contemporary nationalisms as a whole." --Book Jacket.

English.

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