The Little Czech and the Great Czech Nation
When Ladislav Holy precipitately left Czechoslovakia for the UK in 1968 he was already one of the leading anthropologists in Central Europe. In the following decades he made important field studies in Africa. Since 1986 he has been engaged in research in the Czech Republic, and he brings to this timely study of national identity the skills of a seasoned researcher, a cosmopolitan perspective, and the insights of an insider. Drawing on historical and literary sources as well as ethnography, he analyses Czech discourses on national identity. He argues that there were specifically 'Czech' aspects to the communist regime and to the 'velvet revolution', and paying particular attention to symbolic representations of what it means to be Czech, he explores how notions of Czech identity were involved in the debates surrounding the fall of communism, and the emergence of a new social system.
- No anthropological research has previously been done in Czechoslovakia
- Shows how national culture can be studied by anthropologists
- Written by a distinguished Czech anthropologist and in an accessible style
Product details
August 1996Paperback
9780521555845
244 pages
229 × 152 × 14 mm
0.36kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Nation against state
- 2. Freedom, nation, and personhood
- 3. Self-stereotypes and national traditions
- 4. National traditions and the imagining of the nation
- 5. National traditions and the political process
- 6. Nation and state in the context of Czech culture.