Abstracts for 2000 7-8/2008
György Dalos
Horizon 1968
Short '68 reminiscences of a Hungarian writer.
Mária Neményi
La vie est ailleurs
Short '68 reminiscences of a Hungarian sociologist.
Péter Galicza
Once upon a time...
The story of a commune in Budapest '72 by a Hungarian film historian. "Wie es eigentlich gewesen ist" and the aftermath.
Iván Zoltán Dénes
Student activism in Budapest, 1969
Contrary to accepted opinion, there was not only Maoist student activism in Budapest in the late sixties. What happened to the Faculty of Humanities, Eötvös Loránd University? The account of a historical participant.
Tamás Berkes
The own context of the Prague Spring
Democratic socialism: squaring of the circle? The Bohemian experiment.
Jacques Rupnik
1968: The year of two springs
Parallels between May '68 and the Prague Spring are largely the result of the simultaneity of the events; in important respects, the political goals of the two movements were antithetical. Nevertheless, Central European dissent had a significant impact on French anti-totalitarian Left after 1968. First published in Transit (no. 35, Summer 2008).
Götz Aly – Katharyna Rutschky
Back to Rudi Dutschke's pram
1968: delayed offshoot of European totalitarianism or groundswell of liberalisation and democratisation. Talking to Stefan Reinecke and Jan Feddersen, German historian Götz Aly and educationalist Katharina Rutschky cannot agree. First published in taz on 29 January 2007.
Aleksander Smolar
Years of '68
To Polish ears, the language of the Western revolutionaries of '68 "carried the burden of oppression". Western '68ers were often hostile to supporters of the Warsaw March revolt and indifferent towards the subsequent "anti-Zionist" purges. Yet the events were disastrous for Polish Jews at the time and are still relevant forty years later. First published in Transit (no. 35, Summer 2008).
Published 2008-09-24
Original in English
Contributed by Akadeemia
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