OATES-INDRUCHOVÁ, Libora. Academic Memories, Personal Narratives: Publishing and Censorship in Social Sciences in post-1968 Czech Republic. In Remembering 1948 and 1968: Reflections on Two Pivotal Years in Czech and Slovak History, U. of Glasgow. 2008.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Academic Memories, Personal Narratives: Publishing and Censorship in Social Sciences in post-1968 Czech Republic
Název česky Academic Memories, Personal Narratives: Publishing and Censorship in Social Sciences in post-1968 Czech Republic
Název anglicky Academic Memories, Personal Narratives: Publishing and Censorship in Social Sciences in post-1968 Czech Republic
Autoři OATES-INDRUCHOVÁ, Libora.
Vydání Remembering 1948 and 1968: Reflections on Two Pivotal Years in Czech and Slovak History, U. of Glasgow, 2008.
Další údaje
Typ výsledku Prezentace na konferencích
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Organizační jednotka Fakulta sociálních studií
Klíčová slova anglicky Conference presentation
Štítky Conference presentation
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam
Změnil Změnila: doc. Libora Oates-Indruchová, Ph.D., učo 132754. Změněno: 23. 7. 2008 12:19.
Anotace
The paper draws on a research project on post-1968 academic publishing and censorship in the Czech Republic, during which I conducted interviews with academics who had "survived" in some professional way the post-1968 purges and who remained active within official structures in research and publishing between 1968 and 1989 within official structures, and who also continued to be respected by their peers in the post-1989 period. The aim of the project was to investigate mechanisms of intellectual communication through academic texts in conditions of ideological surveillance. The interviewees' accounts turned out to be heavily constrained by the lapse of time since those conditions ceased to exist and by the social memory of state-socialism that has prevailed in public discourse in the meantime. The paper will discuss how these two factors may have affected the findings that concerned memories of personal survival and institutional strategies of exclusion and surveillance in post-1968 Czech academia; findings concerning authors' relation to their written work and to their subject at the time; and the implications this can have on their today's work. The issues the paper will address include: self-stylisation, self-romantisation, colliding generational perspectives, and the politisation of memory.
Anotace česky
The paper draws on a research project on post-1968 academic publishing and censorship in the Czech Republic, during which I conducted interviews with academics who had "survived" in some professional way the post-1968 purges and who remained active within official structures in research and publishing between 1968 and 1989 within official structures, and who also continued to be respected by their peers in the post-1989 period. The aim of the project was to investigate mechanisms of intellectual communication through academic texts in conditions of ideological surveillance. The interviewees' accounts turned out to be heavily constrained by the lapse of time since those conditions ceased to exist and by the social memory of state-socialism that has prevailed in public discourse in the meantime. The paper will discuss how these two factors may have affected the findings that concerned memories of personal survival and institutional strategies of exclusion and surveillance in post-1968 Czech academia; findings concerning authors' relation to their written work and to their subject at the time; and the implications this can have on their today's work. The issues the paper will address include: self-stylisation, self-romantisation, colliding generational perspectives, and the politisation of memory.
Anotace anglicky
The paper draws on a research project on post-1968 academic publishing and censorship in the Czech Republic, during which I conducted interviews with academics who had "survived" in some professional way the post-1968 purges and who remained active within official structures in research and publishing between 1968 and 1989 within official structures, and who also continued to be respected by their peers in the post-1989 period. The aim of the project was to investigate mechanisms of intellectual communication through academic texts in conditions of ideological surveillance. The interviewees' accounts turned out to be heavily constrained by the lapse of time since those conditions ceased to exist and by the social memory of state-socialism that has prevailed in public discourse in the meantime. The paper will discuss how these two factors may have affected the findings that concerned memories of personal survival and institutional strategies of exclusion and surveillance in post-1968 Czech academia; findings concerning authors' relation to their written work and to their subject at the time; and the implications this can have on their today's work. The issues the paper will address include: self-stylisation, self-romantisation, colliding generational perspectives, and the politisation of memory.
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