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Prague (Paperback)
Loot Price: R410
Discovery Miles 4 100
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Prague (Paperback)
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Loot Price R410
Discovery Miles 4 100
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Since its foundation in the ninth century Prague has punched way
above its weight to become a fulcrum of European culture. The city
s most illustrious figures in the fields of music, literature and
film are well known: Mozart staged the premiere of his opera Don
Giovanni here; in the early twentieth century Franz Kafka was at
the forefront of the city's intellectual life, while later writers
such as Milan Kundera and film directors such as Milos Forman
chronicled Prague's fortunes under communism. Yet the city has a
cultural heritage that runs far deeper than Kafka museums and
Mozart-by-candlelight concerts. It encompasses the avant-garde punk
group Plastic People of the Universe, the 'new wave' film directors
of the 1960s who made their striking movies in the city's famed
Barrandov studios, and artists such as Alfons Mucha and Frantisek
Kupka whose revolutionary canvases fomented Art Nouveau and
abstract art at the dawn of the twentieth century. Beyond art
galleries, concert halls and cinemas the history of Prague has been
one of invasion and sometimes brutal oppression. The great German
chancellor Otto von Bismarck once commented that 'whoever controls
Prague, controls mid-Europe' and a succession of imperialist powers
have taken this advice to heart, most recently Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union. Opposition has taken many forms, from the religious
reformer Jan Hus in the fifteenth century to playwright and
dissident Vaclav Havel, whose elevation to the Czechoslovak
presidency in 1990 made him a symbol of the rebirth of democracy in
Eastern Europe. In this book Andrew Beattie also reflects on the
modern city, where bold new buildings such as Frank Gehry's
'Dancing House' rub shoulders with monuments from the Gothic and
Baroque eras such as the Charles Bridge and St. Vitus' Cathedral.
He considers the suburbs too, home to world-renowned football and
ice hockey teams, gleaming shopping centres and grim communist-era
apartment blocks that are often home to Vietnamese, Romany and
Muslim minority groups who live in a city with a growing
international outlook. The Prague he reveals is an increasingly
confident and diverse city of the new Europe.
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