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Postcards from Absurdistan

Prague at the End of History

Derek Sayer
Offering ‘twisted tales of politics and the arts’, Sayer’s cultural history is told from the vantage point of Prague: the love affair of Kafka and Milena Jesenská and Czechoslovakia’s liberal democracy in the 1920s forms the ‘Prelude’; but the main focus of the book is the period between 1938 and 1989, from the Nazi occupation, through ethnic cleansing, Stalinist terror and the Prague Spring to the Velvet Revolution of November 1989. Slightly off-mint.
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RRP £38.00

£17.99

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Product information:
  • Publisher: Princeton UP
  • Year: 2022
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 752pp
  • Illustrated: Yes
  • Dimensions: 242x162mm
  • ISBN: 9780691185453
  • Condition: New - Very Good
  • Weight: 1.1kg
Product code:
539037
Product information
Full publisher description
A sweeping history of a twentieth-century Prague torn between fascism, communism, and democracy-with lessons for a world again threatened by dictatorship

Postcards from Absurdistan is a cultural history of Prague from 1938, when the Nazis destroyed Czechoslovakia's artistically vibrant liberal democracy, to 1989, when the country's socialist regime collapsed after more than four decades of communist party rule. Derek Sayer shows that Prague's twentieth century, far from being a story of inexorable progress toward some "end of history," whether fascist, communist, or democratic, was a tragicomedy of recurring nightmares played out in a land Czech dissidents dubbed Absurdistan. Situated in the eye of the storms that shaped the modern world, Prague holds up an unsettling mirror to the absurdities and dangers of our own times.

In a brilliant narrative, Sayer weaves a vivid montage of the lives of individual Praguers-poets and politicians, architects and athletes, journalists and filmmakers, artists, musicians, and comedians-caught up in the crosscurrents of the turbulent half century following the Nazi invasion. This is the territory of the ideologist, the collaborator, the informer, the apparatchik, the dissident, the outsider, the torturer, and the refugee-not to mention the innocent bystander who is always looking the other way and Vaclav Havel's greengrocer whose knowing complicity allows the show to go on. Over and over, Prague exposes modernity's dreamworlds of progress as confections of kitsch.

In a time when democracy is once again under global assault, Postcards from Absurdistan is an unforgettable portrait of a city that illuminates the predicaments of the modern world.
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