Země střední Evropy v době sovětského útlaku a jejich pokusy o demokratizaci : Konference k 60. výročí maďarské revoluce a boje za svobodu roku 1956 = Central European countries under Soviet oppression and attempts at democratisation : Conference on the 60th anniversary of the 1956 revolution and freedom fight in Hungary
Publication details: Praha : Velvyslanec Maďarska = Prague : Embassy of Hungary , 2016 Description: 154 p. : fot. ; 21 cmOther title: Protikomunistická povstání ve Vychodním bloku : 60. výročí maďarsko 1956 = Anti-communist uprising in Eastern Block : 60th anniversary Hungary 1956Subject(s): Revolución, 1956 | Conmemoración | Intervención militar | Comunismo | República Checa | URSSAbstract: The main aim of the conference was on one hand to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the 1956 revolution and freedom fight against the Soviet oppression and occupation in Hungary; on the other hand to gave a broader comparative insight into the analogous uprisings throughout the region in the 1950s and their possible impact of the democratisation attempt of what we call Prague Spring. What was common in the 1953 Berlin, the 1956 Poznań and Budapest uprisings? Why did the revolutions in different countries lead to a different outcome? How did these attempts determine the following decades in the life of the respective Communist countries? What was common in these revolutions and why did a revolution not take place in the Czech Republic? How does the common history of the countries in the region determine their present role/position in the European Union?Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monografías | Biblioteca Central del MAEC Depósito | 58466 | Available | 1070028 |
The main aim of the conference was on one hand to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the 1956 revolution and freedom fight against the Soviet oppression and occupation in Hungary; on the other hand to gave a broader comparative insight into the analogous uprisings throughout the region in the 1950s and their possible impact of the democratisation attempt of what we call Prague Spring. What was common in the 1953 Berlin, the 1956 Poznań and Budapest uprisings? Why did the revolutions in different countries lead to a different outcome? How did these attempts determine the following decades in the life of the respective Communist countries? What was common in these revolutions and why did a revolution not take place in the Czech Republic? How does the common history of the countries in the region determine their present role/position in the European Union?
Textos en checo e inglés.