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16.05.2008
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 the French Left after 1968, argues Jacques Rupnik. [ more ]

16.05.2008
Rudi Dutschke, Jacques Rupnik

The misunderstanding of 1968

16.05.2008
Mykola Riabchuk

How I became a Czech and a Slovak

16.05.2008
Christian Semler

From pacifism to violence and back again

14.05.2008
Maria Eismont

Towns without censorship


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Eurozine Review


29.04.2008
Eurozine Review

The centre is everywhere

"Arche" looks warily at the Belarusian thaw; "Magyar Lettre" gets to the heart of the central European city; "Kulturos barai" criticizes the culture of groceries; "Fronesis" takes counsel on the "unhappy marriage" between feminism and the Left; "A Prior" looks at monuments that won't melt into air; "Revista Crítica" sees the political potential of bio-art; "Critique & Humanism" analyzes neophilia and neophobia; "Dialogi" lashes out at the Slovenian press; and "Glänta" is missing links.

15.04.2008
Eurozine Review

A mother since birth?

01.04.2008
Eurozine Review

Free minds before free speech

11.03.2008
Eurozine Review

Hannah Arendt on '68

19.02.2008
Eurozine Review

An acronym for the homeless


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Authors

Martin Hala

is a sinologist based in Prague; he has worked for several media-assistance organizations in Europe and Asia.



Eurozine Articles


Martin Hala

From "big character posters" to blogs

Facets of independent self-expression in China

Despite predictions to the contrary, the Internet has not brought about abrupt political change in China and is not likely to do so anytime soon. Its significance and implications for Chinese society lie elsewhere, writes Martin Hala. [German version added] [more]

25.10.2007



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