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Poznejte krásy měst, hradů a klášterů, které založil Přemysl Otakar II., král železný a zlatý.
Questions arose after 1945, and have persisted, about the ownership of properties which had belonged to Jewish communities before the Second World War, to Holocaust victims and survivors, and to Jewish expellees from the Middle East and North Africa. Studies of these properties have often focused on their symbolic values, their places in cultures of memory and identity construction, and measures of justice achieved or denied. This collection explores contesting conceptions of ownership and property claims advanced in the post-war years. The authors focus considerably upon how conflicts over these properties both shaped and reflected shifting and competing ideas about Jewish belonging. They s...
"A comprehensive history of the Jews of the Bohemian Lands whose goal is to narrate and analyze the Jewish experience in the Bohemian Lands as an integral and inseparable part of the development of Central Europe and its peoples from the sixteenth century to the present day"--
Kniha odhaluje variabilitu způsobů, jak se paměť stává součástí krajiny, sedimentuje v ní, reprodukuje se i mizí. Na několika příkladech – okolí příbramské silnice, vzpomínání na zaniklé osídlení v pohraničí, megalitické stavby v jižních Čechách – představuje krajinu jako proces, který je spoluutvářen pamětí stejně jako zapomínáním. Být v krajině s sebou nese přemýšlení o paměti, ponoření se do uplynulého času, zakoušení jeho stop i jejich absencí. Bez tohoto ponoření není možné porozumět ani krajině, ani paměti v ní ukryté.
This book presents an unconventional history of minority nationalism in interwar Eastern Europe. Focusing on an influential group of grassroots activists, Tatjana Lichtenstein uncovers Zionist projects intended to sustain the flourishing Jewish national life in Czechoslovakia. The book shows that Zionism was not an exit strategy for Jews, but as a ticket of admission to the societies they already called home. It explores how and why Zionists envisioned minority nationalism as a way to construct Jews' belonging and civic equality in Czechoslovakia. By giving voice to the diversity of aspirations within interwar Zionism, the book offers a fresh view of minority nationalism and state building in Eastern Europe.
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