Czech and Slovak Experiance : Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990 - John Morison

Czech and Slovak Experiance

Selected Papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990

By: John Morison, Morison

Hardcover | 25 August 1992 | Edition Number 3

At a Glance

Hardcover


$187.31

or 4 interest-free payments of $46.83 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 7 to 10 business days

The Czech and Slovak Experience assembles essays by leading specialists from the USA, Canada, Britain and Czechoslovakia on key aspects of modern Czech and Slovak history: Joseph II's contribution to the development of the Czech national movement, the troubled relationship between Czechs and Slovaks as seen through Czech and Slovak eyes, Slovak linguistic separatism, the emergence of political democracy in post-Versailles Czechoslovakia, Masaryk as a religious heretic, Czechoslovakia's Germans and their treatment by the Czechoslovak government, and Prague's Jewish community after 1918.

More in European History

Meditations : The Annotated Edition - Marcus Aurelius

RRP $49.99

$38.75

22%
OFF
Night : Penguin Modern Classics - Elie Wiesel

RRP $22.99

$17.75

23%
OFF
Blitzed : Drugs in Nazi Germany - Norman Ohler

RRP $22.99

$21.90

Colonialism : A Moral Reckoning - Nigel Biggar

RRP $34.99

$31.75

The Gulag Archipelago : 1918-56 - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

RRP $37.99

$33.90

11%
OFF
The Republic : Penguin Classics - Plato
Autocracy, Inc : The Dictators Who Want to Run the World - Anne Applebaum
Meditations : Penguin Classics - Marcus Aurelius
Rubicon : The Triumph and Tragedy of the Roman Republic - Tom Holland
Unruly : A History of England's Kings and Queens - David Mitchell
Unruly : A History of England's Kings and Queens - David Mitchell

RRP $36.99

$33.25

10%
OFF
One Life : The True Story of Sir Nicholas Winton - Barbara Winton
Princes in the Tower : Solving History's Greatest Cold Case - Philippa Langley
Italy Reborn : From Fascism to Democracy - Mark Gilbert