Front cover image for Velvet revolutions. An oral history of Czech society

Velvet revolutions. An oral history of Czech society

The 'Velvet Revolution' in November 1989 brought about the collapse of the authoritarian communist regime in what was then Czechoslovakia. It also marks the beginning of the country's journey towards democracy. This book examines what the values in so-called real socialism were, as well as how citizens' values changed after the 1989 collapse. In 'Velvet Revolutions', Miroslav Vanek and Pavel Mucke analyze and interpret 300 interviews on citizens' experience of freedom and its absence, the value of work, family and friends, education, relations to public sphere and politics, the experience of free time, and perception of foreigners and foreign countries. The interviewees are drawn from a wide range of professions, including manual workers, service workers, farmers, members of the armed forces, managers, and marketing personnel. All of the interviewees were at working age during the last twenty years of the communist regime and during the post-revolutionary transformation. From this rich foundation, the book builds a multi-layered view of Czech history before 1989 and during the subsequent period of democratic transformation
Print Book, English, 2015
Oxford University Press, Corby, 2015
History
304 pages.
9780199342723, 0199342725
927445876
Acknowledgements: The Privilege of Listening to the Voices of Memory
1. I Want to be Free! : Freedom as a Fundamental Human Value
2. The Family under Socialism and in the Whirlwind of Transformation
3. Friends and the Others : How Czechs Evaluate Foreigners and Foreign Countries
4. Education : A Gateway to Success in Life?
5. From the Requirement to Work to Looking for Work
6. Perception of Free Time : Work, Family, and Leisure
7. Us and Them : Eternal Predestination?
Appendix 1: Photographs by Jindřich Štreit
Appendix 2: Our Narrators