Českí profesori na slovensku, 1, Českí profesori a ich slovenskí žiaci na Univerzite Komenského v rokoch: 1919 - 1949
In: Knižnica Zväzu Slovákov v ČR
In: Séria spoločenskovedná a publicistická 4
8 results
Sort by:
In: Knižnica Zväzu Slovákov v ČR
In: Séria spoločenskovedná a publicistická 4
In: Knižnica Zväzu Slovákov v ČR
In: Séria spoločenskovedná a publicistická 1
In: Selbstverlag Danubius 1
In: Knižnica odborového hnutia 1968,2
In: Index on censorship, Volume 13, Issue 2, p. 27-27
ISSN: 1746-6067
Dominik Tatarka is Slovakia's best-known novelist; but since 1969 not a word of his work has been published Foreign observers have the impression that, while Czech writers and other intellectuals continue to resist the Soviet-imposed cultural repression, their Slovak fellow-citizens remain, at best, silent or collaborate with the regime which has been in power since the invasion of 1968. Unlike in the Czech-speaking parts of the country, there are not hundreds of silenced writers and scholars in Slovakia, nor did the Charter 77 movement gain any substantial support there, with only five Slovak intellectuals putting their signatures to this human and civil rights document. A leading Slovak historian now living in West Germany, Ján Mlynárik explains the background and describes the difficult life of one of the five — Slovakia's best-known novelist, the 70-year-old Dominik Tatarka, who neither collaborates nor keeps silent. An extract from Tatarka's diary follows his account.
In: Séria spoločenskovedná a publicistická, 2
World Affairs Online