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Making the Most of Tomorrow: A North Bohemian Laboratory of Socialist Modernism
Paperback

Making the Most of Tomorrow: A North Bohemian Laboratory of Socialist Modernism

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Most, one of the most impressive historical cities of Northern Bohemia, was destroyed in the sixties and seventies for coal mining. When plans to redevelop the city began, hope and expectations ran high; in the end, however, Most became a symbol for the heartless incompetence of Czechoslovak communism.

In this book, Matěj Spurny explores the historical city of Most from the nineteenth century into the years following World War II, investigating the decision to destroy it as well as the negotiations concerning the spirit of the proposed new city. Situating postwar Most in the context of cultural and social shifts in Czechoslovakia and Europe as a whole, Spurny traces the path a medieval city took to become a showcase of brutalist architecture and the regime’s technicist inhumanity.

But the book, like the city of Most itself, does not end in tragedy. Fusing architectural and political history with urban and environmental studies, Spurny’s tale shows the progress that can be made when Czechs confront the crimes of the past-including the expulsion of local Germans and the treatment of the Romani minority-and engage with rational, contemporary European concepts of urban renewal.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Karolinum,Nakladatelstvi Univerzity Karlovy,Czech Republic
Country
CZ
Date
21 May 2019
Pages
330
ISBN
9788024640174

Most, one of the most impressive historical cities of Northern Bohemia, was destroyed in the sixties and seventies for coal mining. When plans to redevelop the city began, hope and expectations ran high; in the end, however, Most became a symbol for the heartless incompetence of Czechoslovak communism.

In this book, Matěj Spurny explores the historical city of Most from the nineteenth century into the years following World War II, investigating the decision to destroy it as well as the negotiations concerning the spirit of the proposed new city. Situating postwar Most in the context of cultural and social shifts in Czechoslovakia and Europe as a whole, Spurny traces the path a medieval city took to become a showcase of brutalist architecture and the regime’s technicist inhumanity.

But the book, like the city of Most itself, does not end in tragedy. Fusing architectural and political history with urban and environmental studies, Spurny’s tale shows the progress that can be made when Czechs confront the crimes of the past-including the expulsion of local Germans and the treatment of the Romani minority-and engage with rational, contemporary European concepts of urban renewal.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Karolinum,Nakladatelstvi Univerzity Karlovy,Czech Republic
Country
CZ
Date
21 May 2019
Pages
330
ISBN
9788024640174