Náš stát
Published: 2022
Pages: 108
Format: 170×240 mm
Binding: paperback
Subject: history
ISBN: 978-80-280-0045-5 (paperback), 978-80-280-0046-2 (online ; pdf) Edition: Mezi žánry (Between genres), Vol. 1
Jiří Hanuš, Vít Hloušek
Today, the state is most often perceived as a complex, all‑pervasive bureaucratic institution that frequently makes life more difficult for its citizens—a system of offices exercising authority over people. Yet the modern state is an entirely exceptional form of organising social life, shaped since the sixteenth century by a wide range of ideas and concrete power structures: religion and ideology, relations between central and local authority, the separation of powers, concepts of monarchy and democracy, tensions between national and universal interests, and theories of human rights.
The authors of this volume examine various forms of the modern Czech (Czechoslovak) state from 1848 onward and, alongside outlining their basic characteristics, consider which social and national groups embraced particular state arrangements and which, by contrast, questioned or even rejected them. Their analyses often lead to surprising conclusions. The book also demonstrates fruitful interdisciplinary cooperation between a historian and a political scientist.
Professor Jiří Hanuš, PhD (born 1963), is based at the Faculty of Arts of Masaryk University. His research focuses on the history of Christianity, the political and cultural history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, historiography, and the history of universities.
Professor Vít Hloušek, PhD (born 1977), works at the Faculty of Social Studies of Masaryk University. He specialises primarily in comparative political science and contemporary history.
The Mezi žánry ("Between Genres") series is open to all authors with the ambition to reach readers through their own distinctive voice, whether expressed in prose, illustration, poetry, or essayistic writing.