Distributed for Karolinum Press, Charles University
Prague Spring 1968
A detailed, empirically grounded account of the Prague Spring.
Prague Spring 1968 focuses on the key political and social developments between January and August, while situating them within the broader context of the deepening crisis of Czechoslovak state socialism since 1967. Structured chronologically into five parts, the book traces the fall of Antonín Novotný, the rise of Alexander Dubček and the reform project known as “socialism with a human face,” the rapid emancipation of media and civil society, the escalating conflict with the Soviet Union and its allies, and the Warsaw Pact invasion, followed by the Moscow negotiations. Drawing primarily on edited archival sources and critically engaging with extensive Czech and international scholarship, the study analyzes the Prague Spring as a distinctive democratization process centered on the transformation of the Communist Party’s leading role. Emphasizing empathetic historical interpretation, it provides a nuanced portrayal of key actors and decision-making dynamics, highlighting both the possibilities and structural limits of reform within a non-democratic socialist system.
Table of Contents
Part One: How to Remove a First Secretary
Part Two: The Search for a Czechoslovak Model of Socialism
Part Three: “Things Are Not Going as We Wanted”: Attempts to “Consolidate” the Democratisation Process
Part Four: “Clear on the Right! Tanks on the Left!” Escalation of Allied Criticism of the Democratisation Process
Part Five: The Invasion and the End of the Democratisation Process
Conclusion