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this collection derives in substance from papers presented to the first conference organized by the Forum of British, Czech, and Slovak Historians. It was Pavel Seifter, then ambassador of the Czech Republic in London, who suggested the establishment of the Forum. A trained historian himself, whose academic career had been halted by the 1968 invasion, Seifter promoted what has become a series of trilateral meetings designed to enhance links between historians in the three countries and especially, but not solely, to explore areas of common concern in the understanding of their respective pasts.
It seemed obvious to devote the maiden gathering of the Forum, held at Dundee in 2002, to a period when Czechs and Slovaks were associated in the same state, and when that state entertained particularly significant links to the British Isles. More specifically we set ourselves to consider the two thematic spheres indicated in the title of this book. National self-determination and the right-radical challenge to democracy were central concerns—arguably the central ones—of the new Czechoslovakia. Our speakers enquired how distinctive was the experience there; and how far it can cast light on broader European patterns in the decades after 1918.
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