The Czechlands. A Bibliography. A Selected Bibliography of References in English

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The Czechlands A Selected Bibliography of References in English Compiled by Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr. CONTENTS I. General References A. Bibliographies B. Compendia and General Surveys C. Biographical Materials D. Libraries, Archives, Museums, Galleries E. Miscellaneous II. The Land A. General Surveys B. Physical Geography C. Flora and Fauna D. Climate E. Environment F. Travel Guides G. Atlases and Maps III. The People A. Anthropology and Ethnography B. Demography C. Nationalities D. Czechs Abroad IV. History A. General B. Prehistory C. Mediaeval Period D. The Habsburg Period 1

Transcript of The Czechlands. A Bibliography. A Selected Bibliography of References in English

The Czechlands

A Selected Bibliography of References in English

Compiled by Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr.

CONTENTS

I. General ReferencesA. BibliographiesB. Compendia and General SurveysC. Biographical MaterialsD. Libraries, Archives, Museums, GalleriesE. Miscellaneous

II. The LandA. General SurveysB. Physical GeographyC. Flora and FaunaD. ClimateE. EnvironmentF. Travel GuidesG. Atlases and Maps

III. The PeopleA. Anthropology and EthnographyB. DemographyC. NationalitiesD. Czechs Abroad

IV. HistoryA. GeneralB. PrehistoryC. Mediaeval PeriodD. The Habsburg Period

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E. The Czech RevivalF. The Czechoslovak Struggle for IndependenceG. The First Czechoslovak RepublicH. Munich and the Second World WarI. The Post World War II PeriodJ. The Prague Spring and the AftermathK. The Velvet RevolutionL. The Czech RepublicV. The EconomyA. Economic HistoryB. Economic Theory and PlanningC. StatisticsD. AgricultureE. Industry and TransportF. ManpowerG. FinanceH. CommerceH. Foreign Trade

VI. The StateA. Government and PoliticsB. The LawC. Foreign Relations

VII. The SocietyA. Overview of SocietyB. National CharacterC. Social Strata and Occupational GroupsD. Social ChangeE. UrbanizationF. Women and Family OrganizationG. Medicine, Health, WelfareH. Mass Media and Public OpinionI. Psychology

VIII. Cultural LifeA. Language1. Phonology and Grammar

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2. Textbooks3. Dictionaries

B. Literature1. Surveys2. Individual Authors3. Anthologies

C. Folklore1. Folk Art2. Folk and Fairy Tales

D. History of Thought and Culture1. Intellectual and Cultural Life2. Academies and Learned Societies3. Philosophy4. Social Thought5. Scientific and Technical Thought

E. Religion1. Christianity2. Judaism

F. Education

G. Fine Arts

H. Music1. Surveys2. Individual Composers

I. Theater and Cinema

J. Sports and Recreation

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. General Reference

A. Bibliographies

Horecky, Paul L. “Czechoslovakia”, in : East Central Europe. A Guide to Basic Publications.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1969, pp.137-358. Kovtun, George j. Czech and Slovak Literature in English. A Bibliography. Washington, DC, 1984. 132 p.Kovtun, George J. Czech and Slovak History. An American Bibliography. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1996. 481 p.Rechcigl, Miloslav, Jr. Czechoslovakia and its Arts and Sciences.A Selective Bibliography in the Western European Languages. Offprint from The Czechoslovak Contribution to World Culture. . Edited by Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr. The Hague: Mouton , 1964, pp. 555-634Rechcigl, Miloslav, Jr. Czechoslovakia in Bibliography: A Bibliography of Bibliographies. Offprint from Czechoslovakia Past

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and Present. Edited by Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr. The Hague: Mouton, 1968, pp. 1693-1801..Short, David. Czechoslovakia. Oxford: Clio Press, 1986. 411 p. (World Bibliographical Series, Vol. 68).

B. Compendia and General Surveys

Burke, M. J. Czechoslovakia. London: Batsford, 1976. 237 p.Busek, Vratislav and Nicolas Spulber, eds. Czechoslovakia. New York: Praeger, 1957. 520 p. Cerny, Frantisek, ed. The Czech Republic. Praha: Top Press, 1997.220 p.Hajda, Jan, ed. A Study of Contemporary Czechoslovakia. Chicago: University of Chicago for the Human Relations area Files, 1955. 637 p. Kerner, Robert J. Czechoslovakia. Berkeley: University of California, 1949. 504 p.Nyrop, Richard F. and Eugene K. Keefe. Czechoslovakia. A CountryStudy. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: The American University, 1982. 356p. Paul, David. W. Czechoslovakia. Profile of a Socialist Republic at the Cross Roads of Europe. Boulder: Westview Press, 1981. 196 p. Rechcigl, Miloslav, Jr., ed. Czechoslovakia Past and Present. TheHague: Mouton, 1968. 2 vols.Rowe, David N. and Willmore Kendall, eds. Czechoslovakia. An AreaManual. Chevy Chase, MD: Operations Research Office, Johns Hopkins University, 1955. 2 vols.

C. Biographical Materials

Directory of Czechoslovak Officials. A Reference Aid. Washington,DC: CIA, 1985. 166 p.Rechcigl, Eva and Miloslav Rechcigl, Jr. SVU Directory. History, Organization and Biographies of Members. Washington, DC: SVU, 1992. 386 p.

D. Libraries, Archives, Museums, Galleries, Publishing

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1. Libraries, Archives, Publishing Budurowycz, Bohdan. Slavic and East European Resources in Canadian Academic and Research Libraries. Ottawa: National Library of Canada, 1976. 595 p. Chaloupka, Otakar. Children’s Books in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1978.87 p.Horecky, Paul Louis and David H. Kraus. East Central and Southeast Europe: A Handbook of Library and Archival Resources in North America. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-Clio, 1976. 4 66 p.Lewanski, Richard C. Eastern Europe and Russia/Soviet Union. A Handbook of West European Archival and Library Resources. New York: K. G. Saur, 1960. 317 p. Libraries in the Czechoslovak Republic. Martin: Matica slovenska,1978. 49 p. Ryznar, Eliska and Murlin Croucher. Books on Czechoslovakia: Pastand Present. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. 1989. 107 p

2. Museums, Galleries

Altshuler, David, ed. The Precious Legacy. Judaic Treasures from the Czechoslovak State Collections. New York: Summit Books, 1983.288 p.Neubert, Karel. Art Treasures of Prague. A Guide to the Galleries, Museums and Exhibition Rooms of Prague. Prague: Grafoprint, 1992. 191 pStatni zidovske muzeum. The State Jewish Museum in Prague. Prague: Olympia Pub. House, 1978. 38 p.

D. Miscellaneous Aids

1. HandbooksCountry Review. Czech Republic 1999-2000. Edited by Robert Kelly,

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Debra Ewing, Stanton Doyle and Denise Youngblood. Country Watch, 1999. 80 p.Czechoslovakia. London: British Overseas Trade Board. Periodically up-dated..Czechoslovakia in Facts and Figures 1918-1988. Prague: Orbis, 1989.Gawlik, Ladislav. Present-day Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis PressAgency, 1984Seidl, Boleslav. Czechoslovakia in Brief. Prague: Orbis, 1966. 63p.Straka, Vaclav, comp. Czechoslovakia Today. Prague: Artia, 1964. 192 p. 2. Statistics

Statistical Yearbook of the Czech Republic 1994. Praha: Cesky spisovatel, 1994. 248 p.

3. Abbreviations

Abbreviations in the Czechoslovak Press. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1970. 185 p.

II. The Land

A. General Surveys Czech Republic. American Geographical Society, 1995. Czech Republic in Pictures. Minneapolis: Lerner Publishing Co., 1995. 64 p. Czechoslovakia. Official Standard Names Approved by the US Board on Geographic Names. Washington, DC: CIA, 1955. 879 p.Demek, Jaromir and Miroslav Strida. Geography of Czechoslovakia. Prague: Academia, 1971. 330 p.Kish, George. Czechoslovakia. Garden City, NY: N. Doubleday, 1967. 64 p.Mellor, Roy H. E. Eastern Europe: A Geography of the Comecon

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Countries. London: Macmillan, 1975. 358 p. Mutton, A .F.A. Central Europe: A Regional and Human Geography. London: Longmans, 1968. 2nd ed. 488 p.Pounds, N. J. G. “Czechoslovakia’s Geography,” in: Eastern Europe. London: Longmans, Green, 1969. 912 p.Wanklyn, Harriet. Czechoslovakia. London: George Philip & Son, 1954. 446 p. The World and its People: Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland. New York: Greystone Press, 1965. 216 p.

B. Physical Geography

Pribyl, Jan, ed. Largest Cave System of the Czech Socialist Republic in the Moravsky Kras (Moravian Karst). Brno: Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1973. 83 p. .

C. Flora, Fauna

Andera, Milos and Jaroslav Cerveny. Atlas of Distribution of the Mammals of the Sumava Mountain Region (SW Bohemia). Brno: Ustav ekologie krajiny, Akademie ved CR, 1994. 111 p.Dermek, Aurel. Mushrooms and Other Fungi. Leicester: Galley Press, 1982. 223 p.Hruzik, l. Forests of Czechoslovakia. Prague: Ministerstvo lesniho a vodniho hospodarstvi, 1960. 223 p.Jenik, Jan, ed. Biosphere Resources on the Crossroads pf Central Europe: Czech Republic - Slovak Republic. Prague: Empora, 1994. 168 p. Kapesni atlas jetelin a trav. Compact Atlas of Legumes and Grasses. Brno: Oseva, 1995. 43 p. (Includes english terminology).Mrnka, Miroslav, Miroslav Vyskot, Emil Klimo and Ferdinand Vasicek. Floodplain Forest Ecosystem. Prague:: Academia, 1984. 432 p.Novak, Ivo. A Field Guide in Colour to Butterflies and Moths. London: Octopus Books, 1980. 352 p. Prochazka, Ivan. Kapesni atlas plevelnatych rostlin - Compact Atlas of Weeds. Brono: Oseva Agro, 1997. 47 p. (Includes English terminology).

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Stary, Frantisek and Vaclav Jirasek. Herbs. London: Hamlyn, 1985.239 p. Stastny, Karel. Songbirds. London: Hamlyn, 1980. 216 p. Vostradovsky, J. Freshwater Fishes. London: Hamlyn, 1978. 252 p.

D. Climate

Brazdil, Rudolf and Oldrich Kotyza. History of Weather and Climate in the Czech Lands. Zurich: Geographisches Institut ETH, 1995. 260 p.Brazdil, Rudolf and Oldrich Kotyza. History of Weather and Climate in the Czech Lands II. Brno: Masaryk University, 1996. 178 p.Kalvodova, Jaroslava. Climate Change Scenarios for the Czech Republic. Praha: Cesky hydrometeorologicky ustav, 1996. 99 p.

E. Environment

Carter, F. W. and D. Turnock. Environmental Problems in Eastern Europe. London: Routledge, 1996. 291 p. Environment of the Czech Republic. Prague: Brazda, 1991. 100 p. Henikova, Stanislava and Jaroslav Benes. Environmental Yearbook of Czech Republic 1993-1994. Prague: Czech Environmental Institute, 1995. 240 p.Hradek, Mojmir. Natural Hazards in the Czech Republic. Brno: Regiograph, 1995. 159 p. Lights and Shadows. Environment in Czech Republic. Prague: Ministry of Environment, 1991. 89 p. Moldan, Bedrich. Rainbow Programme. Environmental Recovery Programme for the Czech Republic. 2nd ed. Prague: Academia, 1992.93 p.Moldan, B. et al. National Report of the Czech and Slovak FederalRepublic. UN Conference on Environment and Development. Prague: Empora, 1992. 141 p. Penka, Miroslav, Miroslav Vyskot, Emil Klimo and Ferdinand Vasicek. Floodplain Forest Ecology. Prague: Academia, 1984. 432 p. Vacek, Vaclav, ed. Environmental Laws of the Czech Republic.

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Prague: Ministry of Environment of the Czech Republic, 1993-1994.4 vols. Vidlakova, O., ed. Landscape and Man in Socialist Czechoslovakia.Prague: Orbis, 1977. 111 p.

F. Travel Guides

Beattie, Andrew and Timothy Pepper. Off the Beaten Track. Czech and Slovak Republics. Old Saybrook, CT: Globe Pequot Press, 1995.299 p. Bekova, Anna and Danielle Monsimier. A Prague, Brno, Bratislava. Paris: Hachette-Guides bleus, 1988. 156 p.Berlitz Editors. Prague Pocket Guide. Berlitz, 1994. 144 p. Crawford, Caroline. Prague. CA: Green Trees, 1995. 160 p. Fodor’s the Czech Republic and Slovakia. New York: Fodor’s TravelPublications, 1994-.Frommer’s Prague and the Best of the Czech Republic, with the best City strolls and Day Trips. New York: Macmillan, 1996-. Herre, Sabine. Czech Republic. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1997. 103 p. Horn, Alfred. Czech and Slovak Republics. Hong Kong: APA Publications, 1993. 373 p. Ivory, Michael. Essential Czech Republic. Lincolnwood, IL: Passport Books, 1994. 128 p. King, John and Richard Nebesky. Czech and Slovak Republics. A Lonely Planet Travel Survival Kit. Oakland, CA: Lonely Planet Publications, 1995. 497 p. The Rough Guide to Czech and Slovak Republics. By Bob Humphreys and Tim Nollen. 4th ed. . Viking Penguin, 1998. 560 p..

G. Maps and Atlases

Kobza, P. Autoatlas 19 okresnich mest. 2. Jizni a Vychodni Cechy - Road Atlas - 19 District Town. 2. Southern and Eastern Bohemia. Brno: P F Art, 1996. 144 p.Kobza, P. Autoatlas 28 okresnich mest. 3. Severni a Zapadni Cechy - Road Atlas - 28 District Towns. 3. Middle and Western Bohemia. Brno: P F Art, 1996. 212 p.

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Czech Republic & Slovak Republic. International Road Maps. 1996US Central Intelligence Agency. Czech Republic. Washington, DC: CIA, 1994. 1 map.

III. The People

A. Anthropology and Ethnography

Haufler, Vlastislav. The Ethnographic Map of the Czech Lands, 1880-1970. Prague: Academia, 1973. 100 p. Wynne, Waller. The Population of Czechoslovakia. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1953. 72 p.

B. Demography

Haufler, Vratislav. Changes in the Geographical Distribution of Population in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Academia, 1966. 130 p. Population Development in the Czech Republic. Serial, 1994- ( Prague: Charles University, Faculty of Science). Wynne, Waller. The Population of Czechoslovakia. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1953. 72 p. C. Nationalities

Brugel, Johann Wolfgang. Czechoslovakia before Munich. The GermanMinority Problems and British Appeasement Policy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973. 334 p. Cohen, Gary B. The Politics of Ethnic Survival. the Germans in Prague, 1861-1914. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981. 344 p. Horak, Stephan M. et al. Eastern European National Minorities, 1919-1980. A Handbook. Littleton: Libraries Unlimited, 1985. 375 p. Kann, Robert A.. The Multinational Empire. Nationalism and National Reform in the Habsburg Monarchy 1848-1918. New York: Octagon Books, 1950. 2 vols. Kieval, Hillel J. The Making of Czech Jewry. National Conflict and Jewish Society in Bohemia, 1870-1818. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 279 p.

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Kieval, Hillel J. Languages of Community. The Jewish Experience in Czech Lands. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.Klein, George and Milan Reban, eds. The Politics of Ethnicity in Eastern Europe. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1981. 279 p.Leff, Carol S. National Conflict in Czechoslovakia. The Making and Remaking of the State, 1918-1987. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988. 304 p. ,Magocsi, Robert. The Shaping of a National Identity. Subcarpathian Rus, 1848-1948. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978. 640 p. Magocsi, Paul Robert. The Rusyn-Ukrainians of Czechoslovakia. An Historical Survey. Vienna: Wilhelm Braummuller-Universitats Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1983. 93 p. Pearson, Raymond. Ethnic National Minorities in Eastern Europe 1848-1945. London: Macmillan, 1983. 249 p. Roy, James Alexander. Pole and Czech in Ailesoia. London: John Lane, 1921. 212 p. Sugar, Peter F. and Ivo J. Lederer. Nationalism in Eastern Europe. Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1969. 467 p.Wiskemann, Elizabeth. Czechs and Germans. A Study of the Strugglein the Historic Province of Bohemia and Moravia. 2nd ed. London: Macmillan, 1967. 299 p.

D. Czechs Abroad

1. U.S.A.

Capek, Thomas. The Czechs (Bohemians) in America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1920. 293 p. Reprinted, New York: Arno Press, 1969. Chada, Joseph. The Czechs in the United States. New York: The SVUPress, 1981. 292 p. Habenicht, Jan. History of Czechs in America. St. Paul, MN: Czechoslovak Genealogical Society International, 1996. 581 p.Hudson, Estelle and H. R. Maresh. Czech Pioneers of the Southwest. Dallas, TX: South-West Press, 1934. 418 p. Reprinted, Houston: Western Lithograph, 1996

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Korytova-Margstadt, Stepanka. To Reap a Bountiful Harvest. Czech Immigration Beyond the Mississippi, 1850-1900. Iowa City: Rudi Publications, 1993. 179 p. .Laska, Vera. The Czechs in America 1633-1977. A Chronology and Fact Book. Dobbs Ferry, NY: Oceana Publications, 1978. 152 p.Machann, Clinton and James W. Mendl. Krasna Amerika. A Study of the Texas Czechs 1851-1939. Austin: Eakin Press, 1983. 280 p. Rechcigl, Miloslav, Jr. Czechs, Slovaks and Ruthenians in the US.A Selective Bibliography. An Offprint from Czechoslovak and Central European Journal, vol. 10, No. 1 (1991), pp. 83-132.Rosicky, Rose. A History of the Czechs (Bohemians) in Nebraska. Omaha: Czech Historical Society of Nebraska, 1929. 429 p. Reprinted by Whipporwill Publications, 1987. Skrabanek, Robert L. We’re Czechs. College Station, TX: Texas A &M University, 1988. 240 p..

2. Canada

Gellner, John and John Smerek. The Czechs and Slovaks in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1968. 172 p.

3. Latin America

IV. History

A. General

Bannan, Alfred and Achilles Edelenyi. Documentary history of Eastern europe. New York: Twayne, 1970. 392 p. Bradley, John F. N. Czechoslovakia. A Short History. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1971. 212 p. Cornej, Petr. Fundamentals of Czech History. Prague: Prah Publishers, 1992. 48 p.

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Dvornik, Francis. The Slavs in European History and Civilization.New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1962. 688 p.Hermann, Adolf Hans. A History of the Czechs. London: Alan Lane,1975. 324 p.Hochman, Jiri. Historical Dictionary of the Czech State. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 1998. 203 p. Krejcir, Jaroslav and Stanislav Sojak.. Czech History. Chronological Survey. Dubicko: INFOA, 1995. 150 p. .Opat, Jaroslav, ed. Illustrated Czech History. Prague, 1996. Polisensky, Josef V. History of Czechoslovakia in Outline. Prague: Bohemian International Publishers, 1991. 142 p. Renner, Hans. A History of Czechoslovakia since 1945. London: Routledge, 1989.200 p. Sayer, Derek. The Coasts of Bohemia. A Czech History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998. 442 p. Seton-Watson, R.W. A History of the Czechs and Slovaks. London: Hutchinson, 1943. 413 p. Reprinted, Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1965. 413 p.Skilling, H. Gordon. Czechoslovakia 1918-88. Seventy Years from Independence. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1991. 232p. Stone, Norman and Eduard Strouhal, eds. Czechoslovakia. Crossroads and Crises, 1918-1988. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1989. 336 p. :Teich, Mikulas, ed. Bohemia in History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 389 p. .Thomson, S. Harrison. Czechoslovakia in European History. 2nd ed.Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1953. 485 p. Reprinted, Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1965. Wallace, William V. Czechoslovakia. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1976. 374 p.

B. Prehistory

Archeological News in the Czech Socialist Republic. Edited by Jiri Hrala et al. 10th International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, Mexico City, 1981. Prague: Archeological Institute, 1981. 238 p.Bren, Jiri. Trisov. A Celtic Oppidum in South Bohemia. Prague:

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National Museum, 1966. 158 p. Ehrich, Robert W and Emilie Pleslova-Stikova. Homolka. An Neolithic Site in Bohemia. Prague: Academia, 1968. 499 p.Filip, Jan. Recent Archaeological Finds in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1966. 98 p. Filip, Jan. Celtic Civilization and its Heritage. Prague: Academia, 1976. 2nd ed. 232 p. Gojda, Martin. The Ancient Slavs. Settlement and Society. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1991. 105 p. Hrala, Jiri, ed. Archaelogical News in the Czech Socialist Republic. Prague: Archaelogical Institute, 1981. 238 p. Neustupny, Jiri. The Prehistory of Czechoslovakia. Exhibition, 1958. Prague: National Museum, 1958. 55 p. Neustupny, Evzen and Jiri Neustupny. Czechoslovakia before the Slavs. London: Thames & Hudson, 1961. 225 p.Pavlu, I. And M. Zapotocka. Analysis of the Czech Neolithic Pottery: Morphological and Chronological Structures of Projections. Prague: Archeological Institute, 1978. 217 p. Sakar, Vladimir. Roman Imports in Bohemia. Prague: Museum Nationale Pragae, 1970. 72 p. Tringham, Ruth. Hunters, Fishers and Farmers of Eastern Europe, 6000-3000 B.C. London: Hutchinson University Library, 1981. 240 p.Tringham, Ruth. Hunters, Fishers and Farmers of Eastern Europe, 6000-3000 B.C. London: Hutchinson University Library, 1981. 240 p. ,Venclova, Natalie. Prehistoric Glass in Bohemia. Prague: Archeologicky ustav, CSAV, 1990. 415 p.

C. Mediaeval Period

Beeby, Susan, David Brackton and Zdenek Klanica. Great Moravia. The Archaeology of Ninth-Century Czechoslovakia. London: British Museum Publications, 1982. 37 p. Boba, Imre. Moravia’s History Reconsidered. A Reinterpretation ofMedieval Sources. The Hague: M. Nijhoff, 1971. 177 p.Dekan, Jan. Moravia Magna. The Great Moravian Empire, its Art andTimes. Minneapolis, MN: Minneapolis Control Data Arts, 1979. 166

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p. Dvornik, Francis. The Slavs. Their Early History and Civilization. Boston: American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1956. 394 p. Jarrett, Bede. The Emperor Charles IV. London: Eyre & Spottswoode, 1935. 247 p. Vlasto,A.P. The Entry of the Slavs into Christendom. An Introduction to the Medieval history of the Slavs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970. 435 p.

The Bohemian Reformation

Bartos, Frantisek M., The Hussite Revolution, 1424-1437, ed. JohnM. Klassen. Boulder, Cob.: East European Monographs, 1986. 204 p.Betts, Reginald Robert. Essays in Czech History. London: Athlone Press, 1969. 315 p.Bonnechose, Francois Paul Emile Boisnormand de. The Reformers before the Reformation. New York: AMS Press, 1980. 199 p. Brock, Peter, The Political and Social Doctrines of the Unity of Czech Brethren in the Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries. The Hague: Mouton, 1957.Fudge, Thomas A. The Magnificent Ride. The First Reformation in Hussite Bohemia. Brookfield, VT: Ashgate, 1998. 315 p. Gillett, E.H. The Life and Times of John Hus or The Bohemian Reformation of the Fifteenth Century. New York: AMS Press, 1978. 2 v.Heymann, Frederick G.. John Zizka and the Hussite Revolution. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1955. 521 p.:Heymann, Frederick G., George of Podebrady: King of Heretics. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1965. 671 p.Kaminsky, Howard, A History of the Hussite Revolution. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967. 580 p.Klassen, John Martin. The Nobility and the Making of the Hussite Revolution. Boulder, CO: East European Quarterly, 1978. 186 p.Lutzow, Francis. The Life and Times of Master John Hus. New York:AMS Press, 1978. 398 p. Macek, Josef. The Hussite Movement in Bohemia. London: Lawrence &Wishart, 1965. 119 p.

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Odlozilik, Otakar. The Hussite King: Bohemia in the European Affairs 1440-1471. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1965. 337 p. Od1ozilik, Otakar, The Hussite King: Bohemia in European Affairs,1440-1471. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1965.Rican, Rudolf, The History of the Unity of Brethren: A ProtestantHussite Church in Bohemia and Moravia, tr. C. Daniel Crews. Bethlehem, Pa.: Moravian Church in America, 1992.Spinka, Matthew, John Amos Comenius: That Incomparable Moravian. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1943.Spinka, Matthew. John Hus at the Council of Constance. New York: Columbia University Press, 1965. 327 p. Spinka, Matthew. The Letters of John Hus. Translated from the Latin and the Czech by Matthew Spinka. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1972. 233 p. Spinka, Matthew. John Hus. A Biography. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1979. 344 p. The Universal Peace Organization of King George of Bohemia. A Fifteenth Century Plan for World Peace, 1462-1464. Prague: Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1964. 120 p. Wagner, Murray L. Petr Chelcicky. A Radical Separatist in HussiteBohemia. Scottdale, PA: Herald Press, 1983. 219 p. Zeman, Jarold Knox. The Anabaptists and the Czech Brethren in Moravia 1526-1628. A Study of Origins and Contacts. The Hague: Mouton, 1969. 407 p.

C. The Habsburg Period

Dillon, Kenneth J. King and Estates in the Bohemian Lands 1526-1564. Brussels: Editions de la Libraire Encyclopedique, 1976. 206 p.Evans, Robert J. W. The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1550-1700. An Interpretation. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979. 531 p.Kann, Robert a. and Zdenek V. David. The Peoples of the Eastern Habsburg Lands, 1526-1918. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1984. 543 p.Kerner, Robert J. Bohemia in the Eighteenth Century.. A Study in Political, Economic, and Social History, with Special Reference

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to the Reign of Leopold II, 1790-1792. New York: Macmillan, 1932.412 p. . Macartney, C.A. The Habsburg Empire 1790-1918. London: Weidenfield & Nicolson, 1968.886 p.Polisensky, Josef V. The Thirty Years War. Berkeley,: University of California Press, 1971. 305 p. Sommer, Ernest. Into Exile. History of the Counter-Reformation inBohemia (1620-1650). London: New Europe Publishing, 1943. 154 p. Wright, William E. Serf, Seigneur and Sovereign. Agrarian Reform in Eighteenth-Century Bohemia. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, Press, 1966. 216 p.

C. The Czech Revival

Agnew, Hugh Le Caine, Origins of the Czech National Renascence. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh, 1993. 338 p.Bradley, John F..N. Czech Nationalism in the Nineteenth Century.Boulder, CO: East European Monographs , 1984. 153 p.Brock, Peter and H. Gordon Skilling, eds The Czech Renascence of the Nineteenth Century. Essays Presented to Otakar Odlozilik, inHonour of his Seventieth Birthday. Toronto: University of TorontoPress, 1970. 345 p.Garver, Bruce M. The Young Czech Party, 1874-1901, and the Emergence of a Multi-Party System. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1978. 568 p.Heim, Michael Henry. The Russian Journey of Karel Havlicek Borovsky. Munchen: O. Sagner, 1979. 194 p.Hroch, Miroslav. Social Preconditions of National Revival in Europe. A Comparative Analysis of the Social Composition of Patriotic Groups among the Smaller European Nations. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985. 220 p. Kimball, Stanley B. Czech Nationalism A Study of the National Theatre Movement, 1845-83. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1964. 186 p. Kohn, Hans. Pan-Slavism. Its History and Ideology. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1953. 356 p.

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Orton, Lawrence D. The Prague Slav Congress of 1848. Boulder, CO:East European Monographs, 1978. 187 p.Pech, Stanley Z. The Czech Revolution of 1848. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1969. 386 p.Polisensky, Josef V Aristocrats and the Crowd in the Revolutionary Year 1848. A Contribution to the History of Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Austria. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1980. 245 p. ,Reinfeld, Barbara K. Karel Havlicek (1821-1856). A National Liberation Leader of the Czech Renascence. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1982. 135 p. Vysny, Paul. Neo-Slavism and the Czechs, 1898-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977. 287 p.

D. The Czechoslovak Struggle for Independence

Baerlein, Henry. The March of the Seventy Thousand. London: Leonard Parsons, 1926. 287 p. Bradley, John F. N. The Czechoslovak Legion in Russia, 1914-1920.Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1991. 156 p. Fic, Victor M. Revolutionary War for Independence and the RussianQuestion: Czechoslovak Army in Russia 1914-18. New Delhi: AbhinavPublications, 1977. 270 p.Fic, Victor M. The Bolsheviks and the Czechoslovak Legion. The Origin of their Armed Conflict March-May 1918. New Delhi: AbhinavPublications, 1978. 495 p. Kalvoda, Josef. The Genesis of Czechoslovakia. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1986. 673 p.Kovtun, George J. The Czechoslovak Declaration of Independence. AHistory of the Document. Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1985. 55 p.Mamatey, Victor S. The United States and East Central Europe, 1914-1918. A Study in Wilsonian Diplomacy and Propaganda. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1957. 431 p. Masaryk, Tomas Garrigue. The Making of a State. Memories and Observations, 1914-1918. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1927. 518p. Nosek, Vladimir, Independent Bohemia. An Account of the Czecho-

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Slovak Struggle for Liberty. London: J.M. Dent & Sons, 1918. 190 p. Opocensky, Jan. The Collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy andthe Rise of the Czechoslovak State. Prague: Orbis, 1928. 214 p. Rees, H. Louis. The Czechs during World War I. The Path to Independence. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1992. 170 p.Seton-Watson, Hugh and Christopher Seton-Watson. The Making of a New Europe: R. W. Watson and the Last Years of Austria-Hungary. London: Methuen, 1981. 458 p.Unterberger, Betty M. The United States, Revolutionary Russia, and the Rise of Czechoslovakia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1989. 463 p. Wolchik, Sharon L. and Ivan Dubovicky, eds. The Birth of Czechoslovakia. Prague: SET OUT - Roman Misek, 199.112 p. Zeman, Zbynek A. The Break-up of the Habsburg Empire, 1914-1918. London: Oxford University Press, 1961. 274 p.

E. The First Czechoslovak Republic

Cisar, Jaroslav and Frantisek Pokorny, comps. The Czechoslovak Republic. Survey of its History, Geography, its Political and Cultural Organisation, and its Economic Resources. London: T. F. Unwin, 1922. 218 p.Kerner, Robert J., ed. Czechoslovakia: Twenty Yeats of Independence. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1940.504 p. .Korbel, Joseph. Twentieth Century Czechoslovakia: the Meaning of History. New York: Columbia University Press, 1977. 346 p.Mamatey, Victor S. and Radomir Luza, eds. A History of the Czechoslovak Republic 1918-1948. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1973. 534 p. Olivova, Vera. The Doomed Democracy. Czechoslovakia in a Disrupted Europe. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1972. 276 p.Rothschild, Joseph. East Central Europe between the Two World Wars. Seattle, WA: University of Washington, Press, 1974. 420 p. Seton-Watson, Hugh. Eastern Europe between the Wars, 1918-1941. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1945; 3rd ed. Hamden, CT: Shoe String Press, 1963. 442 p.

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Taborsky, Edward. Czechoslovak Democracy at Work. London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1945. 159 p. Young, Edgar P. Czechoslovakia. Keystone of Peace and Democracy. London: V. Gollancz, 1938. 400 p.

F. Munich and the Second World War

Burgess, Alan. Seven Men at Daybreak. London: Evans Bros. 1960. 231 p. Bradley, John F. N. Lidice: Sacrificial Village. New York: Ballantine Books, 1973. 160 p. Erdely, Eugene V. Germany’s First European Protectorate. The Fateof the Czechs and Slovaks. London: R. Hale, 1942. 252 p. Eubank, Keith. Munich. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1963. 322 p. Hajsman, Jan. The Brown Beast: The Concentration Camp Europe under the Rule of Hitler. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 212 p. Ivanov, Miroslav. The Assassination of Heydrich, 27 May 1942. London: Hart-Davis, 1973.292 p. Kennan, George Frost. From Prague after Munich. Diplomatic Papers1938-1940. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1968. 266 p.Mastny, Vojtech. The Czechs under Nazi Rule. The Failure of National Resistance, 1939-1942. New York: Columbia University Press, 1971. 274 pProchazka, Theodore, The Second Republic. The Disintegration of Post-Munich Czechoslovakia October 1938-March 1939. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1981. 231 p. Taborsky, Edward. President Eduard Benes Between East and West 1938-1948. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1981. 299 p.Wheeler-Bennett, J.. W.. Munich. Prologue to Tragedy. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1948. 507 p.White. Lewis M., ed. On all Fronts. Czechs and Slovaks in World War II. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1991. 296 p.

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G. The Post-War II Period and the Communist Take-over

Bloomfield, Jan. Passive Revolution. Politics and the Czechoslovak Working Class, 1945-48. London: Allison & Busby. 1979. 290 p. Gadourek, Ivan. The Political Control of Czechoslovakia. A Study in Social Control of a Soviet Communist State. Leiden: H. E. Stenfert Kroese, 1953. 285 p. Hammond, Thomas T., ed. The Anatomy of Communist Takeovers. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1975. 664 p. Kaplan, Karel. The Short March. The Communist Take-over of Powerin Czechoslovakia 1945-1948. London: C. Hurst, 1985. 240 p.Loebl, Eugen. Stalinism in Prague. The Loebl Story. New York: Grove Press, 1969. 330 p. Nemec, Frantisek and Vladimir Moudry. The Soviet Seizure of Subcarpathian Ruthenia. Toronto: Anderson, 1955. 375 p.Seton-Watson, Hugh, East European Revolution. 3rd ed. New York: Praeger, 1955. 435 p. Szulc, Tad. Czechoslovakia since World War Two. New York: Viking Press, 1971. 504 p.

H. The Prague Spring and the Aftermath

Deutscher, Tamara, ed. Voices of Czechoslovak Socialists. London:Merlin Press, 1977. 134 p. Eidlin, Fred H. The Logic of ‘Normalization”. The Soviet Intervention in Czechoslovakia of 21 August 1968 and the Czechoslovak Response. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1980. 278 p. Golan, Galia. Reform Rule in Czechoslovakia. The Dubcek Era 1968-1969. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press , 1973. 327 p.Golan, Galia. Reform Role in Czechoslovakia. The Dubcek Era 1968-1969. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973. 327 p.Institute of History of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. TheCzech Black Book. London: Pal Mall Press, 1969. 303 p. Kusin, Vladimir V. From Dubcek to Charter 77. A Study of ‘Normalization’ in Czechoslovakia, 1968-1978. Edinburgh: University Press, 1978. 353 p.

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Remington, Robert Alison, ed. Winter in Prague: Documents on Czechoslovak Communism in Crisis. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1969. 473p. Selucky, Radoslav. Czechoslovakia. The Plan that Failed. London: Nelson, 1870. 150 p. Shawcross, William. Dubcek. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1970. 317 p.Skilling, H. Gordon. Czechoslovakia’s Interrupted Revolution. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976. 924 p.Valenta, Jiri. Soviet Intervention in Czechoslovakia, 1968. Anatomy of a Decision. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,1979. 208 p. Zeman, Zbynek A. B. Prague Spring. A Report on Czechoslovakia 1968. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1969. 169 p.

I. The Velvet Revolution and Beyond

Bauer, George R. The New Czech Republic. Year of Turmoil. Olathe,KS: Historic Preservation Press, 1997. 146 p. Bradley, John F. N. Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution. A Political Analysis. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1992. 140 p.Dedek, Oldrich et al. The Break-up of Czechoslovakia. An In-depthEconomic Analysis. Aldenshot: Avebury, 1996. 208 p. Havel, Vaclav. The Art of the Impossible. Politics as Morality inPractice. Speeches and Writings, 1990-1996. 1997.Musil, Jiri, ed. The End of Czechoslovakia. Budapest: Central European University Press, 1995. 283 p. Shepherd, Rubin H. E. Czechoslovakia. The Velvet Revolution and Beyond. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000.Simon, Jeffrey. Czechoslovakia’s “Velvet Divorce,” Visegrad Cohesion, and European Fault Lines. Washington: Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University, 1993. 32p. Symynkywicz, Jeffery. Vaclav Havel and the Velvet Revolution. Dillon Press, 1995. Wheaton, Bernard and Zdenek Kavan. The Velvet Revolution . Czechoslovakia 1988-1991. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992. 255

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p.Whipple, Tim d., ed. After the Velvet Revolution. Vaclav Havel and the New Leaders of Czechoslovakia Speak Out. New York: Freedom House, 1991. 328 p.

. V. The Economy

A. Economic History

Basch, Antonin. The Danube Basin and the German Economic Sphere. New York: Columbia University Press, 1943. 275 p. Berend, Ivan T. and Gyorgy Ranki. Economic Development in East Central Europe in the 19th and 20th Centuries. New York: Columbia University Press, 1974. 402 p. Chmela, Leopold. The Economic Aspect of the German Occupation of Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 166 p.Dedek, Oldrich. The Break-up of Czechoslovakia. An In-depth Economic Analysis. Aldershot: Avebury, 1996. 208 p. Freudenberger, Herman. the Waldstein Woolen Mill. Noble Entrepreneurship in Eighteenth-Century Bohemia. Boston: Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, 1963. 68 p. Freudenberger, Herman. The Industrialization of a Central European City. Brno and the Fine Woollen Industry in the 18th Century. Edington: Pasold Research Fund, 1977. 220 p. Kaser, M. S. and E. A. Radice. The Economic History of Eastern Europe, 1919-1975. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985-86. 3vols. .Purs, Jaroslav. Banks and the Industrialization of the Czech Lands. Evolution of the Structure of the Financial System and theFunction of Banks until 1880. Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and World History of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1982. 46 p.Rudolph, Richard L. Banking and Industrialization of Austria-Hungary. The Role of Banks in the Industrialization of the Czech Crownlands. 1873-1914. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1976. 291 p. Teichova, Alice. An Economic Background to Munich. International

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Business and Czechoslovakia 1918-1938. London: Cambridge University Press, 1974. 422 p Teichova, Alice. The Czechoslovak Economy, 1918-1980. London: Routledge, 1988. 178 p. Zauberman, Alfred. Industrial Progress in Poland, Czechoslovakia and East Germany, 1937-1962. London: Oxford University Press, 1964. 338 p.

B. Economic Theory and Planning

Batt, Judy. Economic Reform and Political Change in Eastern Europe. A Comparison of the Czechoslovak and Hungarian Experience. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1988. 353 p.Batt, Judy. East Central Europe. From Reform to Transformation. New York: Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1991. 129 p. Blejer, Mario I. and Fabrizio Coricelli. The Making of Economic Reform in Eastern Europe. Conversations with Leading Reformers inPoland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic. Brookfield, VT: E. Elgar, 1995. 156 p.Cervenka, Zdenek. The Czech Republic. The Quest for Integration with the West. London: Economist Intelligence Unit, 1996. 88 p. Dedek, Oldrich, ed. The Break-up of Czechoslovakia. An In-depth Economic Analysis. 1996.Brookfield, VT: Avebny, 1996. 208 p. Englis, Karel. Economis. A Purpose Oriented Approach. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1992. 275 p. Feiwel, George R. New Economic Patterns in Czechoslovakia. Impactof Growth, Planning, and the Market. New York: Praeger, 1968. 589p.Fogel, Daniel. S., ed. Managing in Emerging Market Economies. Cases from the Czech and Slovak Republics. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994.237 p.Klaus, Vaclav. Renaissance. The Rebirth of Liberty in the Heart of Europe. Washington, DC: Cato Institute, 1997. Krovak, J., ed. Current Economics and Politics of Czechoslovakia.New York: Nova Science Publishers, 1994. 321 p. Mejstrik, Michal. et al., eds. The Privatization Process in East-Central Europe. Evolutionary Process of Czech Privatization. Boston: Kluwer Publishers, 1997. 330 p.

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Michal, Jan m. Central Planning in Czechoslovakia. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1960. 274 p. Myant, Martin et al. Successful Transformations. The Creation of Market Economies in Eastern Germany and the Czech Republic (Studies of Communism in Transition Series). Brookfield, VT: E. Elgar, 1997. Regional Problems and Policies in the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic. Paris: OECD, 1996. 191 p. Selucky, Radoslav. Economic Reforms in Eastern Europe. Political Background and EconomicSignificance. New York: Praeger, 1972. 179 p.Sik, Ota. Economic Planning and Management in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1966. 29 p. Sik, Ota. Czechoslovakia. The Bureaucratic Economy. White Plains.NY: International Arts and Sciences Press, 1972. 138 p. Stevans, , John N. Czechoslovakia at the Crossroads. The EconomicDilemmas of Communism in Postwar Czechoslovakia. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1985. 349 p. Svejnar, Jan, ed. The Czech Republic and Economic Transition in Eastern Europe. San Diego, CA: Academic Pres, 1995. 434 p. Welfe, Wladyslaw, ed. .Economies in Transition and the World Economy Models. New York: P. Leng, 1997. 527 p. Wheeler, George S. The Human Face of Socialism. The Political Economy of Change in Czechoslovakia. New York: L. Hill, 1973. 174p.

C. Market Economy

Jiri Vecernik. Markets and People. The Czech Reform Experience ina Comparative Perspective. Brookfield, VT: Avebury, 1996. 294 p.

D. Statistics

COMECON Foreign Trade Data, 1980. London: Macmillan, 1981. 509 p.Federal Office of Statistics. Statistical Survey of Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis. AnnualOECD Economic Surveys. Czech Republic 1996 (Serial) 1996.

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Shoup, Paul S. The East European and Soviet Data Handbook. Political, Social and Developmental Indicators, 1945-197. New York: Columbia University Press, 1981. 482 p.Statistical Yearbook 1992. Czechoslovakia. Annual. 1992 E. Agriculture

Adams, Arthur E. and Ian S. Adams. Men versus Systems. Agriculture in the USSR, Poland, and Czechoslovakia. New York: Free Press, 1971. 327 p. Bergmann, Theodor. Farm Policies in Socialist Countries. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1975. 289 p. Bernitz, Alexander. A Survey of Czechoslovak Agriculture. Washington, DC: USDA, ERS, 1962. 48 p. Cummings, R. A Survey of Czechoslovak Agriculture. Washington, DC: US Economic Research center, 1982. 28 p. Czechoslovakia’s Agriculture: Situation, Trends, and Prospects. Luxembourg: UNIPUB, 1991. 189 p.Feierabend, Ladislav K. Agricultural Production in Czechoslovakiain 1953. New York: Mid-European Studies Center, 1954. 36 l. .Feierabend, Ladislav K. Agricultural Cooperatives in Czechoslovakia. New York: Mid-European Studies Center, 1952. 125 p.Francisco, Ronald A., Betty A. Laird and Roy D. Laird, eds. Agricultural Policies in the USSR and Eastern Europe. Boulder, CO: Colorado Westview Press, 1980. 332 p. Kundrata, M. and J. Ungerman.Interaction between Agriculture and Nature Conservation in the Czech and Slovak Republics. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN, 1991. 123 p.Lazarcik, George. The Performance of Socialist Agriculture. A Case Study of Production and Productivity, Czechoslovakia 1934-38and 1946-61. New York: L. W. International Financial Research, 1963. 121 p. Nole, Marcel, Imrich Rubik and Vladimir Kuzel. Czechoslovak Agriculture. Prague: Orbis, 1960. 107 p. Wright, William E. Serf, Seigneur, and Sovereign. Agrarian Reformin Eighteenth-Century Bohemia. Minneapolis: University of

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Minnesota Press, 1966. 217 p.

F. Industry and Transport

Brada, Josef C. et al., eds. Industry in the Czech and Slovak Republics. Paris: OECD, 1994.139 p. Hitchens, D. M. W. N. et al. Competitiveness of Industry in the Czech Republic and Hungary. 1995. 360 p.Scheifele, Berrnd and Ralf Thaeter. Aspects of Business Law in the Czech Republic. Acquisition of Companies, Establishment of Joint Ventures, and Formation of Companies. Washington, DC: International Law Institute, 1995. 156 p.Mieckowski, Bogdan. Transportation in Eastern Europe. Empirical Findings. Boulder, CO: East European Quarterly, 1978. 221 p. Mieckowski, Bogdan, ed. East European Transport: Regions and Models. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1980. 353 p. Webster, Leila and Dan S. Wanson The Emergence of Private Sector Manufacturing in the Former Czech and Slovak Republic. A Survey of Firms. Washington, DC: World Bank, 1993.93 p.Zauberman, Alfred. Industrial Progress in Poland, Czechoslovakia,and East Germany 1937-1962. New York: Oxford University Press, 1964. 338 p.

G. Labor

Adam, Jan, ed. Employment Policies in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. London: Macmillan, 1982. 216 p. Adam, Jan. Employment and Wage Policies in Poland, Czechoslovakiaand Hungary since 1950. London: Macmillan, 1984. 251 p. Fisera, Vladimir C. Workers’ Councils in Czechoslovakia 1968/69. Documents and Essays. London: Allison & Busby, 1978. 200 p.OECD. Review of the Labour Market in the Czech Republic. Paperback 1993.Soulsby, Ed Clark. Organization, Management and Transformation. Institutional Change in the Czech Republic. (Employment and Work Relation in Context). 1998.

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H. Commerce

Sckolnick, Lewis B., ed. Czechoslovakia. Trade, Licensing and Investing Rules and Regulations. Rector Press, 1994. 80 p.

I. Finance

Adam., Jan. Wage, Price and Taxation Policy in Czechoslovakia, 1948-1970. Berlin: Duncker & Humboldt, 1974. 231 p Alton, Thad P. Czechoslovak National Income and Products, 1947-1948 and 1955-1956. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. 255 p. Hacik, Vladimir et al. The Finance of Czechoslovakia in the New Scheme of Management. Bratislava: Slovak Pedagogic Publishing House, 1968. 287 p. Havlik. Peter and Friedrich Lovcik. The Gross Domestic Product ofCzechoslovakia, 1970-1980. Washington, DC: World Bank, 1985. 79 p. Krejci, Jaroslav. National Income and Outlay in Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Yugoslavia. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1982. 122 p. Lazarcik, Gregor. Czechoslovak Gross National Product by Sector of Origin and by Final Use, 1937 and 1948-1965. New York: Columbia University, 1969. 98 p. Lazarcik, Gregor and George J. Staller. A New Index of Czechoslovak Industrial Output, 1937 and 1947-1965. New York: Columbia University, 1968. 78 p.Michal, Jan M. Size-Distribution of Incomes under Socialism in Czechoslovakia. Wien: Inst. f. hoehere Studien, 1971. 47 p. Pesek, Boris P. Gross National Product of Czechoslovakia in Monetary and Real Terms, 1946-58. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956. 72 p. Stadnik, Milos. The Conception of National Income in Czechoslovakia. A Study in Doctrinal History. Prague: Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1968. 44 p.Vecernik, Jiri. Economic Inequities Old and New. The Czech Case. Prague: Institute of Sociology, 1994. 27 p.

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J. Privatization

Earle, John S., ed. Small Privatization. The Transformation of Retail Trade and Consumer Services in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. 301p.

H. Foreign Trade

Doing Business in the Czech Republic. 2nd ed. UK: Kogan PrintingCo., 1995. 256 p. . Trade Policy Review (Gatt). Czech Republic 1996.Fallenbuchl, Zbigniew M. and Carl H. McMillan, eds. Partners in East-West Economic Relations. The Determinants of Choice. New York: Pergamon Press, 1980. 461 p. Wacker, Vladimir. Council for Mutual Economic Assistance and the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1979. 146 p. Wacker, Vladimir. International Economic Cooperation. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1983. 85 p.

VI. The State

A. Government and Politics

Benes, Vaclav, Andrew Gyorgy and George Stambuk. Eastern EuropeanGovernment and Politics. New York: Harper & Row, 1966. 247 p. Bradley, J. F. N. Politics in Czechoslovakia 1945-1971. Washington, DC: University Press of America, 1981. 231 p. Havel, Vaclav. The Art of the Impossible. Politics and Morality in Practice. Speeches and writings, 1990-1996. New York: Knopf, 1997. 273 p. Korbel, Josef. The Communist Subversion of Czechoslovakia, 1938-1948. The Failure of Coexistence. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1959. 258 p. Krejci, Oskar. History of Elections in Bohemia and Moravia . Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1995. 425 p. :

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Krystufek, Zdenek. The Soviet Regime in Czechoslovakia. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1981. 340 p.Kusin,Vladimir V. Political Grouping in the Czechoslovak Reform Movement. London: Macmillan, 1972. 224 p. Leff, Karol Skalnik. The Czech and Slovak Republics. Nation versus State. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996. 295 p. Schmidt, Dana a. Anatomy of a Satellite. Boston: Little, Brow, 1952. 512 p. Simon, Jeffery. Czechoslovakia’s ‘Velvet Divorce’, Visegrad Cohesion, and Europaen Fault Lines. Washington, DC: Institute forNational Strategic Studies, 1993. 32 p.Staar, Richard F. Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe. Stanford :Hoover Institution Press, 1982. 4th ed. 375 p. Suda, Zdenek. Zealots and Rebels. A History of the Ruling Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1980. 412 p. Taborsky, Edward. Communism in Czechoslovakia, 1948-1960. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1961. 628 p. Wheaton, Bernard. Radical Socialism in Czechoslovakia. Bohumil Smeral, the Czech Road to Socialism. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1986. 240 p.Wingfield, Nancy M. Minority Party Politics in Multinational State. The German Social Democrats of Czechoslovakia, 1918-1938.Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1989. 260 p. Zinner, Paul E. Communist Strategy and Tactics in Czechoslovakia,1918-48. New York: Praeger, 1963. 264 p.

B. The Law

Ballantine, Elizabeth, ed. Report of the Delegation to the Czech and Slovak Federal Republics and Hungary. Legal Challenges in Central Europe. Chicago, IL: American Bar Association, 1993. 74 p. The Constitution of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Prague: Orbis, 1960. 105 p. Dvorak, Ivo. The Constitutional Foundations of the Czechoslovak Federation. Prague: Orbis, 1978. 2nd ed. 123 p.

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Gsovski, Vladimir. ed.. Legal Sources and Bibliography of Czechoslovakia. New York: Praeger, 1959. 180 p.Gsovski, Vladimir and Kazimierz Grzybowski, ed. Government, Law and Courts in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. New York: Praeger, 1959. 2 vols. Triska, Jan F. Constitutions of the Communist Party-States. Stanford, CA: The Hoover Institution Press, 1968. 541 p. Ulc, Otto. The Judge in a Communist State. A View from Within. Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1972. 307 p.

C. Foreign Relations

Benes, Edvard. Memoirs. From Munich to New War and New Victory. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1954. 346 p.Benes, Edvard. My War Memoirs. New York: Arno Press, 1971. 512 p.Heidrich, Arnost. International Political Causes of the Czechoslovak Tragedies of 1938 and 1948. Washington, DC: SVU, 1962.Kalvoda, Josef. Czechoslovakia’s Role in Soviet Strategy. Washington, DC: University Press of America, 1978. 381 p.Kennan, George F. From Prague after Munich. Diplomatic Papers, 1938-1940. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1968. 266 p. Krejci, Oskar. Czechoslovak National Interests. Boulder: East European Monographs, 1996. 193, 167 p.Lipper, Barbara and Peter Becker, eds. Toward EU-membership. Transformation and Integration in Poland and the Czech Republic. Bonn: Europa Union Verlag, 1998. 333 p. Lukes, Igor. Czechoslovakia between Stalin and Hitler. The Diplomacy of Edvard Benes in the 1930s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996. 318 p. Michta, Andrew A., ed. America’s New Allies: Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic in NATO. Seattle: University of WashingtonPress, 1999. Nowak, Chester Michael. Czechoslovak-Polish Relations, 1918-1939.A Selected and Annotated Bibliography. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institutions Press, 1976. 219 p.

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Perman, D. The Shaping of the Czechoslovak State. Diplomatic History of the Boundaries of Czechoslovakia, 1914-1920. London: E. J. Brill, 1962. 339 p. Polisensky, Josef V. Canada and Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1967. 60 p.Polisensky, Josef V. Britain and Czechoslovakia. A Study in Contacts. Prague: Orbis, 1968. 2nd ed. 98 p.Suda, Zdenek. The Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1969. 180 p. Taborsky, Edward. President Edvard Benes between East and West, 1938-1948. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press, 1981. 299 p. Ullmann, Walter. The United States in Prague, 1945-1948. Boulder,CO: East European Monographs, 1978. 205 p. Vondracek, Felix J. The Foreign Policy of Czechoslovakia, 1918-1935. New York: Columbia University Press, 1937. 451 p. Wandycz, Piotr S. Czechoslovak-Polish Confederation and the GreatPowers, 1940-43. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 160 p. Weidenhofferova, Iva, ed. A Conflictual Community, Catastrophe, Detente. An Outline of the Portrayal of German-Czech History since the 19th Century. Prague: Ustav mezinarodnich vztahu, 1996.44 p.

VII. The Society

A. Overview of Society

Bednar, Miloslav and Michal Vejrazka, eds. Traditions and PresentProblems of Czech National Culture. Washington, DC: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy, 1994. 198 p. Krejci, Jaroslav and Pavel Machonin. Czechoslovakia, 1918-92. Laboratory for Social Change. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996.266 p. Mukherjee, Ramkrishna. The New Czechoslovakia. An Indian Sociologist Looks at Czechoslovakia Today. Bombay: Current Book house, 1951. 104 p. Wolchik, Sharon L. Czechoslovakia. Transition, Politics,

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Economics and Society. London: Pinter Publishers, 1991. 390 p. ,

B National Character

Holy, Ladislav. The Little Czech and the Great Czech Nation. National Identity and the Post-Communist Transformation of Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. 226 p.Pynsent, Robert B. Question of Identity. Czech and Slovak Ideas of Nationality and Personality. Budapest: Central European University Press, 1994. 244 p.

C. Social Strata and Occupational Groups

Faber, Bernard Lewis, ed. The Social Structure of Eastern Europe.Transition and Process in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Yugoslavia. New York: Praeger, 1976. 423 p. Krejci, Jaroslav. Social Change and Stratification in Postwar Czechoslovakia. New York: Columbia University Press, 1972. 207 p.Mateju, Petr. Determinants of Economic Success in the First Stageof the Post-Communist Transformation. The Czech Republic 1989-1992. Prague: Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 1993. 28 p.Mateju, Petr and Blanka Rehakova. Revolution for Whom? Analysis of Selected Patterns of Intragenerational Mobility in the Czech Republic, 1988-1992. Prague: Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 1993. 19 leaves. Triska, Jan F. and Charles Gati, ed. Blue Collar Workers in Eastern Europe. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1981. 320 p.

D. Social Change

Adam, Jan. Social Costs of Transformation to a Market Economy in Post-socialist Countries. The Case of Poland, the Czech Republic,and Hungary. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1999. Bauerova, Jaroslava. Social Policy in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1987. 41 p. Field, Marx G., ed. Social Consequences of Modernization in Communist Countries. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,

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1976. 277 p. Lytle, Douglas. Pink Tanks and Velvet Hangovers. An American in Prague. Berkeley, CA: Frog, 1995. 341 p. Machonin, Pavel. Social and Political Transformation in the CzechRepublic. Prague: Institute of Sociology, 1993. 32 p. Machonin, Pavel. Social Transformation and Modernization: On Building Theory of Social Changes in the Post-communist European Countries. Praha: Sociologicke nakladatelstvi, 1997. 155 p. Mateju, Petr and Blanka Rehakova. Revolution fro Whom? Analysis of Selected Patterns of Intragenerational Mobility in the Czech Republic, 1989-1992. Prague: Institute of Sociology, 1993. 19 leaves. Mozny, Ivo. Social Consequences of a Change in Ownership. Two Case Studies in Industrial Enterprises in the Czech Republic - Spring 1993. Brno: Masaryk University, 1995. 154 p. .Paul, David W. The Cultural Limits of Revolutionary Politics. Change and Continuity in Socialist Czechoslovakia. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1979. 361 p. Potucek, Martin. Not only the Market. The Role of the Market, Government, and the Civic Sector in the Development of Post-communist Societies. New York: Central European University Press,1999. Ringen, Stein and Claire Wallace. Social Reform in the Czech Republic. Prague: Prague Digital Arts, 1994. 68 p. Vecernik, Jiri. Markets and People. The Czech Reform Experience in a Comparative Perspective. Brookfield, VT: Avebury, 1996. 294 p. Volgyes, Ivan, ed. Political Socialization in Eastern Europe. A Comparative Framework. New York: Praeger, 1975. 201 p. Volgyes, Ivan, ed. Social Deviance in Eastern Europe. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1978. 198 p.

E. Urbanization

Gutkind, E. A., ed. Urban Development in East-Central Europe : Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary. New York: Collier-Macmillan, 1972. 339 p.

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Hitchins, Keith, ed. Studies in East European Social History. Vol. 2. Urbanization in Czechoslovakia. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1981.Kansky, Karel. Urbanization under Socialism. the Case of Czechoslovakia. New York: Praeger, 1976. 313 p. Musil, Jiri. Urbanization in Socialist Countries. White Plains, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1981. 188 p.

F. Women and Family Organization

Heitlinger, Alena. Women and State Socialism. Sex Inequality in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. London: Macmillan, 1979. 241p. Czechoslovak Woman. Serial, (Prague: Czechoslovak Women’s Council).Iggers, Wilma Abeles. Women of Prague. Ethnic Diversity and Social Change from the Eighteenth Century to the Present. Providence, RI: Berghahn Books, 1995. 381 p. Scott, Hilda. Does Socialism Liberate Women ? Experiences from Eastern Europe. Boston: Beacon Press, 1974. 240 p.Jancar, Barbara Wolfe. Women under Communism. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978. 291 p. Nentvichova, Bozena and Jirina Ruzkova, Position of Women in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Prague: s.n., 1981. 36 p.Population Policy in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1978. 86 p.Volkova, Bronislava. A Feminist’s Semiotic Odyssey through Czech Literature. Lewiston: E. Mellen Press, 1997. 195 p. Wolchik, Sharon L. and Alfred G. Meyer, eds. Women, State, and Party in Eastern Europe. Durham: Duke University Press, 1985. 453p.

G. Medicine, Health, Welfare

Czechoslovak Health Services, 1966. Prague: Institute for Health Statistics, 1967. 26 p. David, Henry P. and Robert J. McIntyre. Reproductive Behavior. Central and Eastern European Experience. New York: Springer,

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1981. 393 p.Health Care and Health Services in the Czech Republic, 1997 in Statistical Data. Prague: Institute of Health Information and Statistics of the Czech Republic, 1997. 58 p. Kaser, Michael. Health Care in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1976. 278 p. Nemec, Frantisek. Social Security in Czechoslovakia. London: Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1943. 20 p.Nemec, Frantisek. From Social Welfare to Social Justice. London: Lincolus-Prager, 1943. 43 p. Weinerman, E. Richard. Social Medicine in Eastern Europe. The Organization of Health Services and the Education of Medical Personnel in Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1969. 201 p.

H. Mass Media and Public Opinion

Anon. ‘Svoboda’ The Press in Czechoslovakia 1968. Zurich: International Press Institute, 1969. 125 p. Connor, Walter D and Zvi Y. Gitelman, with Adaline Huszczo and Robert Blumstock. Public Opinion in European Socialist Systems. New York: Praeger, 1977. 197 p. Kaplan, Frank l. Winter into Spring. The Czechoslovak Press and the Reform Movement 1963-1968. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1977. 208 p.

Lendval, Paul. The Bureaucracy of Truth: How Communist GovernmentManage the News. London: Burnett, 1981. 285 p. Paulu, Burton. Radio and Television Broadcasting in Eastern Europe. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota, Press, 1974. 592 p. Piekalkiewicz, Jaroslav A. Public Opinion Polling in Czechoslovakia 1968-69. Results and Analysis of Survey Conducted during the Dubcek Era. New York: Praeger, 1972. 359 p.Reisky-Dubnic, Vladimir. Communist Propaganda Methods. A Case Study on Czechoslovakia. New York: Praeger, 1960. 287 p.Walsh, William A. Survey Research and Public Attitudes in EasternEurope and the Soviet Union. New York: Pergamon Press, 1981. 365

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p.

H. Human Rights

Hamsik, Dusan. Writer against Rulers. London: Hutchinson, 1971. 208 p. Havel, Vaclav et al. The Power and the Powerless. Citizens against the State in Central Eastern Europe. London: Hutchinson, 1985. 228 p. International Committee for the Support of Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia White Paper on Czechoslovakia. Paris: The Committee, 1977. 269 p. Pelikan, Jiri, ed. The Czechoslovak Political Trials, 195-1954. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1971. 368 p. Pelikan, Jiri. Socialist Opposition in Eastern Europe. The Czechoslovak Example. London:: Allison & Busby, 1976. 221 p. Riese, Hans-Peter , ed. Since the Prague Spring. Charter 77 and the Struggle for Human Rights in Czechoslovakia. New York: Vintage Books, 1979. 208 p.Skilling, H. Gordon. Charter77 and Human Rights in Czechoslovakia. London: GeorgeAallen & Unwin, 1981. 380 p.

A. Language

1. Phonology and Grammar

Bidwell, Charles Everett. Outline of Czech Morphology. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh, 1971. 82 p. de Bray, R. G. A. Guide to the West Slavonic Languages. Columbus,OH: Slavica Publishers, 1980. 3rd ed. 483 p. Frinta, Antonin. A Czech Phonetic Reader. London: University of :London Press, 1925. 107 p.Kucera, Henry. The Phonology of Czech. The Hague: Mouton, 1961. 112 p. Mann, Stuart E. Czech Historical Grammar. London: University of

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London, 1957. 183 p. Harkins, William E. A Modern Czech Grammar. New York: King’s Crown Press, 1960. 338 p Schenker, Alexander M., ed. The Slavic Literary Languages. New Haven, CT: Yale Concilium on International and Area Studies, 1980. 287 p.Townsend, Charles E. Description of Spoken Prague Czech. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers, 1990. 151 p. Vachek, Josef, ed. a Prague School Reader in Linguistics. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1964. 485 p. Vachek, Josef. The Linguistic School of Prague. An Introduction to Its Theory and Practice. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1966. 184 p.

2. Textbooks. Heim, Michael. Contemporary Czech. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers, 1982. 2nd ed. 271 p.Lee, William R. and Z. Lee. Czech. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1985. 2nd ed. 243 p. Naughton, James. D. Colloquial Czech. London: Rutledge & K. Paul, 1987. 303 p. Short, David. Czech. A Complete Course for Beginners Lincolnwood,IL: NTC Publishing Group, 1994. 346 p. Sova, Milos. Practical Czech Course for English Speaking Students. 2nd ed. Praha: SPN, 1962. 521 p. Townsend, Charles e. Czech through Russian. Columbus, OH: SlavicaPublishers, 1961. 263 p.

3. Dictionaries

Hais, Karel and Bretislav Hodek. English-Czech Dictionary. Velky anglicko-cesky slovnik. Praha: Academia, 1991. 2nd ed. Prague: Academia, 1991-1993. 4 vols. Poldauf, Ivan. Comprehensive Czech-English Dictionary - Velky cesko-anglicky slovnik. 3rd ed. Celakovice: W. D. Publications, 1997. 1188 p.

B. Literature

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1. Surveys

Chaloupka, Otakar. Czech Literature for Children. Its Developmentand Present Output. Prague: Dilia, 1980. 221 p. Dolezel, Lubomir. Narrative Modes in Czech Literature. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1973. 152 p. French, Alfred, Czech Writers and Politics, 1945-1969. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1982. 435 p.Garvin, Paul L., ed. A Prague School Reader on Esthetics, Literary Structure, and Style. 3rd ed. Washington, DC: GeorgetownUniversity Press, 1964. 163 p. Gray, Elizabeth. The Fiction of Freedom. The Development of the Czechoslovak Literary Reform Movement, 1956-1968.Clayton, Vict., Australia: Monash Publications in History, 1991. 73 p. Harkins, William E. and Paul I. Trensky. Czech Literature since 1956. A Symposium. New York: Bohemica, 1980. 161 p. Hruby, Petr. Daydreams and Nightmares. Czech Communist and Ex-Communist Literature. 1917-1987. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1990. 362 p.McMillin, Arnold, ed. Aspects of Modern Russian and Czech Literature. Selected Papers of the Third World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies. Columbus, OH: Slavica Publishers., 1989. 239 p. Mihajlovich, Vasa D., Igor Hajek, Zbigniew Folejewski, Bogdan Czaykowski, Leo D. Rudnytzky and Thomas Butler. Modern Slavic Literature. Vol. 2. Bulgarian, Czechoslovak, Polish, Ukrainian and Yugoslav Literature. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1976. 720 p. Novak, Arne. Czech Literature. Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan Slavic Publications, 1976. 375 p.Souckova, Milada. A Literature in Crisis. Czech Literature, 1938-1950. New York: Mid-Europaen Studies Center, 1954. 158 p. Souckova, Milada. The Czech Romantics. The Hague: Mouton, 1958. 168 p. Souckova, Milada. A Literary Satellite. Czechoslovak-Russian Literary Relations. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970. 179 p. Souckova, Milada. Baroque in Bohemia. Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan

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Slavic Publications, 1980. 216 p.Thomas, Alfred. Anne’s Bohemia. Czech Literature and Society, 1310-1420. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998. 232 p.Thomas, Alfred. The Labyrinth of the Word. Truth and Representation in Czech Literature. Munchen: R. Oldenbourg, 1995.175 p. Trensky, Paul I. Czech Drama since World War II. White Plains, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1978. 250 p.Wellek, Rene. Essays on Czech Literature. The Hague: Mouton, 1963. 214 p.

2. Individual AuthorsFrynta, Emanuel. Hasek, the Creator of Schweik. Prague: Artia, 1965. 145 p.Harkins, William E. Karel Capek. New York: Columbia University Press, 1962. 193 p. Kussi, Peter, ed. Toward the Radical Center. A Karel Capek Reader. Highland Park, NJ: Catbird Press, 1990. 413 p. Parrott, Cecil. The Bad Bohemian. A Life of Jaroslav Hasek. London: Bodley Head, 1978. 296 p.Porter, Robert C. Milan Kundera. A Voice from Central Europe. Aarhus, Denmark: Arkona Publishers, 1981. 82 p. Pynsent, Robert B. Julius Zeyer. The Path to Decadence. The Hague: Mouton, 1973. 264 p.Pynsent, Robert B., ed. Karel Matej Capek-Chod. Proceedings of aSymposium. London: School of Slavonic and East European Studies, 1985. 276 p. Veltrusky, Jarmila F. A Sacred Farce from Medieval Bohemia. Mastickar. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan, 1985. 396 p. .

3. Anthologies

Buchler, Alexander. This Side of Reality. Modern Czech Writing. 1996. Day, Barbara. Czech Plays. Modern Czech Drama. London: Nick Hern Book, 1994. 224 p.French, Alfred, comp. Anthology of Czech Poetry. Ann Arbor, MI:

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Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences, 1973. 372 p.Goetz-Stankiewicz, Marketa. Good-bye, Samizdat. Twenty Years of Czechoslovak Independent Writing. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1992. 309 p.Harkins, William E., ed. Czech Prose. An Anthology. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan, 1983. 321 p. Liehm, Antonin and Peter Kussi, eds., The Writing on the Wall. An Anthology of Contemporary Czech Literature. Princeton, NJ: Karz-Cohl Publishing, 1983. 252 p. Otruba, Mojmir and Zdenek Pesat. The Linden Tree. An Anthology ofCzech and Slovak Literature 1890-1960. Prague: Artia, 1962. 403 p. Pynsent, Robert E. Czech Prose and Verse. A Selection with an Introductory Essay. London: Athlone Press, 1974. 204 p.Schamschula, Walter. An Anthology of Czech Literature. New York: P. Lang, 1991.Selver, Paul, comp. An Anthology of Czechoslovak Literature. London: K. Paul, 1929. 301 p. Thomas, Alfred. The Labyrinth of the Word. Truth and Reputation in Czech Literature. Munchen: R. Oldenbourg, 1995. 174 p. Weiskopf, Franz C., ed. Hundred Towers. A Czechoslovak Anthology of Creative Writing. New York: L. B. fischer, 1945. 277 p.

C. Folklore

1. General Folklore and Customs

Kolasky, John, ed. Look Comrades: The People are Laughing: Underground Wit, Satire and Humour from Behind the Iron Curtain. Toronto: Peter Martin Associates, 1972. 136 p.

2. Folk and Fairy Tales

Absolon, Karel and Karla Butkova-Wankelova. The Tale of Bad Macocha and the Fable of the Underground Punkva River. Rockville,MD: Kabel, 1984. 40 p. . Bandis, Josef. The Key of Gold. Twenty- three Czech Folk Tales. Penfield., 1992. 190 p.

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Burg, Marie. Salt and Gold. Tales from Czechoslovakia. Glasgow: Blackie, 1976. 95 p.Butkova-Wankelova, Karla Moravian Tales, Legends and Myths. Rockville, MD: Kabel, 1992. 209 p. Cerny, Vaclav, Zlata Cerna and Miroslav Novak. Tales of the Uncanny. London: Hamlyn, 1976. 211 p.Erben, Karel Jaromir. Tales from Bohemia. London: Purnell, 1987. 139 p.Erben, Karel Jaromir. Listen Kids. Czech Fairy Tales from Karel Jaromir Erben. Keasbey, NJ, 1989. 72 p. `Gabler, Mirko. Tall, Wide, and Sharp-Eye. A Czech Folktale. New York: H. Holt, 1994. Haviland, Virginia and Anca Hariton. Favorite Fairy Tales Told inCzechoslovakia. New York: Beech Tree Books, 1995. 94 p. Horak, Jiri and Jane Carruth. Folk and Fairy Tales from Bohemia. London: Hamlyn, 1973. 186 pHorejs, Vit. Twelve Iron Sandals and Other Czechoslovak Tales. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, :Prentice Hall, 1985. 79 p.Jirasek, Alois. Some Aspects of Czech Culture. New Haven: Human Relations Area Files, 1953. 54 p. . Jirasek, Alois. Old Czech Legends. (UNESCO Collection of Representative Works. European Series). UK: Forest Books, 1992. 199 p. Mayer, Marianna. The Prince and the Princess. A bohemian Fairy Tale. New York: Bantam Books, 19889. 64 p..Michael, Maurice and Pamela Michael. Fairy Tales from Bohemia. Chicago: Follett, 1968. 182 pOffer, Charles K. Salt above Gold and Other Bohemian Folk Stories. . New York; F. Watts, 1968. 64 p.Nemcova, Bozena. Fairy Tales from Czechoslovakia. Rockville, MD: Kabel, 1987. 305 p. Peters, Andrew and Zdenka Kabatova-Taborska. Salt id Sweeter thanGold. Barefoot Books, 1994. 32 p.Quinn, Zdenka and John Paul Quinn. The Water Sprite of the GoldenTown. Folk Tales of Bohemia. Philadelphia: Macrae Smith Co., 1971. 159 p. Syrovatka, Oldrich and Rudolf Luzik. Slav Tales. London: Dent, 1974. 197 p. .

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Weil, Lisl. The Golden Spinning Wheel. An Old Bohemian Folk Tale with Music by Antonin Dvorak. New York: Macmillan, 1969. 40 p.Wenig, Adolf. Beyond the Giant Mountains. Tales from Bohemia. Boston: Houghton Mifflin co., 1923. 4 p. l., 3-88 p.Wisniewski, David. Golem. New York: Clarion Books, 1996. 1 v.Wood, Ruzena. The Palace of the Moon and Other Tales. London: Andre Deutsch, 1981. 128 p.Peters, Andrew, Salt is Sweeter than Gold. Boston: Barefoot Books, 1994. 32 p..

3. Folk ArtBogatyrev, Petr G. Functions of Folk Costumes in Moravian Slovakia. Tha Hague: Mouton, 1971. 107 p. Hasalova, Vera and Jaroslav Vajdis. .Folk Art of Czechoslovakia. London: Hamlyn, 1974. 296 pNewall, Venetia. An Egg at Easter. A Folklore Study. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1971. 423 p. Lubinova, Mila. Dances of Czechoslovakia. London: Max Parrish, 1949. 40 p. Malik. Jan. Puppetry in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 56 p. Vydra, Josef. Folk Painting on Glass. London: Spring Books, n.d. 57 p.

4. Folk MusicSmisek, Anita. Czechoslovak Folksongs. Fish Creek, WI: Alliance Publications, 1994. V.f music. Van Slyck, Nicholas. Czech Mates. Songs and Dances Based on CzechFolk Tunes. For violin, viola, and piano. Edited by Jane Daniel. Cincinnati: Willis Music Co., 1987. 1 score + 2 parts. Hradistan. Moravian Outlaw Songs (sound recording). Selected, compiled, and arranged by Jiri Pavlica. Musical collaboration Jaroslav Krcek, Prague: Supraphon, 1986. 1 sound disc.Czech Folk Music (sound recording). Traditional and Contemporary..Prague: Supraphon, 1983. 2 sound discs. Holy, Lubos. They Live in Song (sound recording). Moravian Folk Songs. Performed by Lubos Holy, Dusan Holy. Prague: Supraphon,

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1982. 1 sound disc.Usmev Folk Ensamble. Authentic Folk Songs from Bohemia (sound recording). New York: Olympic Records, 1982. 1 sound disc.Olsava Folk Ensamble. Folk Songs from the Moravian-Slovak Hills (sound recording). Prague: Supraphon, 1976. I sound disc.Tomes, Edward. Czechoslovakian Melodies (sound recording). New York: London International, 1968. 1 sound disc.Marki, Jaroslav. Authentic Folklore from Czechoslovakia (sound recording). Prague: Supraphon, 1963. 3 discs. Folprecht, Zdenek. Czechoslovakia in Song and Dance (sound recording). Prague: Supraphon, 1963. I1 sound disc.Soukup, Lubomir.. Anthology of South Bohemia Folk Music. The documentary Recordings of Folk Singers and Instrumentalists. Madeby Lubomir Soukup in the years 1950-1960. 1 disc.Bhattacharya, Deben. Songs and Dances from Czechoslovakia (sound recording). Argo ZNF, 1972. 2 s.Blaha, Zdenek. Anthology of Chod Folk Music. Prague: Supraphon, 1973. 1 disc.

D. History of Thought and Culture

1. Intellectual and Cultural Life

Nosek, Vladimir. The Spirit of Bohemia. A Survey of Czech History, Music and Literature. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1926. 379 p. Parrott, Cecil. Czechoslovakia. Its Heritage and Its Future. Newcastle, UK: 1968. Rechcigl, Miloslav, Jr., ed. The Czechoslovak Contribution to World Culture. The Hague: Mouton, 1994. 682 p.Wright, Cornelia B., ed. A Thousand Years of Czech Culture. Riches from the National Museums in Prague. Winston-Salem, NC: Old Salem,, Inc., 1996. 166 p.

2. Academies and Learned Societies

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. 1996 Information

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Handbook. Prague: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 1996. 197 p. Biological Institutes of Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences 1950-1960. Anniversary Volume and Bibliography. Prague: Publishing House of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1961. Reich, E. and B. Vlacil, eds. The Czechoslovak Academy of Agriculture, Its Foundation, Programme, Organization and Activities. Prague: Czechoslovak Academy of Agriculture, 1931.

3. Philosophy

Kohak, Erazim. Jan Patocka. Philosophy and Selected Writings. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989. 386 pKovtun, George J. The Spirit of Thomas G. Masaryk (1850-1937). AnAnthology. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990. 267 p. Novy, Lubomir, Jiri Gabriel and Jaroslav Hroch, eds. Czech Philosophy in the 20th Century. Washington, DC: Paideia Press, 1994. 234 p. Pecen, Jaroslav, ed. The Philosophical Understanding of Human Beings. Papers by Czechoslovak Authors of the Main Theme of the XVIII. World Congress of Philosophy. Prague: Academia, 1988. 162 p.Wang, Hao. A Logical Journey. From Godel to Philosophy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996. 391p. Waren, William Preston. Masaryk’s Democracy. A Philosophy of Scientific and Moral Culture. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina, Press, 1941. 254 p. Yourgrau, Palle. The Disappearance of Time. Kurt Godel and the Idealistic Tradition in Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991. 182 p.

4. Social and Humanistic Thought

Capek, Karel. Masaryk on Thought and Life. London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1938. 214 p. Cauly, Olivier. Comenius. Paris: Editions du Felin, 1995. 342 p.Kohak, Erazim, ed. Masaryk on Marx. An Abridged Edition of T. G. Masaryk, The Social Question. the Philosophical and Sociological

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Foundations of Marxism. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press,1972. 444 p. Laurie, Simon Sommerville. John Amos Comenius, Bishop of the Moravians. This Life and Educational Works. New York: B. Franklin, 1973. 272 p..Murphy, Daniel. Comenius. A critical Reassessment of his Life andWork. Blackrock: Irish Academic Press, 1995. 294 p.Pynsent, Robert B., ed. T. G. Masaryk (1850-1937). vol. 2 Thinkerand Critic. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1989. 204 p.Reinfeld, Barbara K. Karel Havlicek (1821-1856). A National Liberation Leader of the Czech Renascence. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1982. 135 p.Scharzenberg, Frantisek. Frantisek Palacky. Washington, DC: SVU, 1978. 26 p. Zacek, Joseph F. Palacky: The Historian as Scholar and Nationalist. The Hague: Mouton, 1970.137 p.

5. Scientific and Technical Thought

a. Surveys

Barvikova, Hana. Ludmila Curinova, and Maria Hrochova. Czechoslovak History of Science: Selected Bibliography, 1980-1988. Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and General History, 1989. 213 p.Bolton, Henry. The Follies of Science at the Court of Rudolf II, 1576-1612. Milwaukee: Pharmaceutical Review Publishing Co., 1904.217 p. Ceskoslovenska akademie ved. Science in Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1966. 173 p. Ceskoslovenska akademie zemedelska. The Czechoslovak Academy of Agriculture. Its Foundation, Programme. Organization and Activities. Compiled by Edward Reich and Bohus Vlacil. Prague: The Academy, 1931. 53 p. Evans, Robert J. Rudolf II and his World. A Study in Intellectual History, 1576-1612. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973. 323 p.

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Janko, Jan, ed. Studies of Czechoslovak Historians for the 18th International Congress of the History of Science. Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and General History, 1989. 196 p. Khas, Ladislav. Czechoslovak Science. Prague: Orbis, 1963.Novy, Lubos, ed. Studies of Czechoslovak Historians for the 16th International Congress of the History of Science, Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and General History, 1981. 415 p. Novy, Lubos and Irena Stasiewicz-Jasiukowa, eds. Problems of Teaching the history of Science. Studies of Czechoslovak and Polish Historians of Science for the 16th International Congress of the History of Science. Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and General History, 1981. 553 p. Novy, Lubos, ed. The Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. History and Present Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1982. 47 p. Smekal, Odolen, ed., Brain Power in the Czech Lands. From Medieval Bohemian Experimenting to Modern Czech Science and Technology. New Delhi: Embassy of the Czech Republic, 1995. 179 p.Strida, Michal. Development of Science in Czechoslovakia.. Prague: Orbis, 1988. 27 p.Tauer, Jaroslav. 100 Years. Czech Academy of Sciences and Arts. Prague: Academia, 1991.50 p.

B. Individual ScientistsCatalogue of the Hrdlicka Paleopathology Collection. San Diego, CA: San Diego Museum of Man, 1980. 359 p. Dawson, John W. Logical Dilemmas. The Life and Work of Kurt Godel. Wellesley, MA: A. K. Peters, 1997. 361 p.Druce, Gerald. Two Czech Chemists. Bohuslav Brauner (1855-1935). Frantisek Wald ((1861-1930). London: The New Europe Publishing Co., 1944. 67 p.Gade, John Allyne. The Life and Times of Tycho Brahe. New York: Princeton University Press,1947. 209 p.Holzer, Hans. The Alchemist. The Secret Magical Life of Rudolf von Habsburg. New York: Stein & Day, 1974. 192 p. Iltis, Hugo. Life of Mendel. New York: W. W. Morton, 1932. 336 p.John, Henry J. Jan Evangelista Purkyne. Czech Scientists and Patriot, 1787-1869. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society,

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1959. 94 p. Katetov, Miroslav and Petr Simon. The Mathematical Legacy of Eduard Cech. Basel: Birkhauser, 1993. 441 p. Khas, Ladislav. Jaroslav Heyrovsky. Founder of Polarography. Prague: Orbis, 1968. 30 p.Kotek, Vaclav and Ladislav Niklicek, Jan Evangelista Purkyne and His Place in the History of Medicine and Natural Sciences of the 19th Century. Prague: Academia, 1987. 74 p.Kruta, Vladislav. J. E. Purkyne (1787-1869). Physiologist. A Short Account of his Contributions to the Progress of Physiology with a Bibliography of his Works. Prague: Acdemia, 1969. 137 p. Nagel, E. and R. Newman. Godel’s Proof. New York: New York University Press, 1969. Novotny, Vladimir V. Anthropological Congress Dedicated to ales Hrdlicka. Proceedings. Prague: Academia, 1971. 584 p. Novy, Lubos, ed. Bernard Bolzano (1781-1848). Bicentenary. Early Mathematical Works. Prague: Institute of Czechoslovak and GeneralHistory, 1981. 582 p. Orel, Vitezslav. Mendel. New York: Oxford University Press, 1984.111 p. Purkynova spolecnost, Prague. In Memoriam Joh. Ev. Purkyne, 1787-1937. Prague: Purkynova spolecnost, 1937.100 p. Schultz, Adolph H. Biographical Memoir of Ales Hrdlicka, 1869-1943.Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences, 1944.Sootin, Harry. Gregor Mendel. Father of the Science of Genetics. New York: Vanguard Press, 1959. 223 p. Sosna, Milan, ed. G. Mendel. Memorial Symposium. 1865-1965. Proc.of a Symposium, Brno, August 4-7, 1965. Praha: Academia, 1966. 288 p. Wichterle, Otto. Recollections. Prague: s.n., 1994. 229 p.Wang, Hao. Reflections on Kurt Godel. Canbridge, MA: MIT Press, 1987. 336 p. Wang, Hao. A logical Journey. From Godel to Philosophy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996. 391 p.

E. Religion

1. Christianity

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Brock, Peter. The Political and Social Doctrines of the Unity of Czech Brethren in the Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries. The Hague: Mouton, 1957. 302 p. Dittrich, Zdenek R. Christianity in Great-Moravia. The Hague: J. B. Wolters, 1962. 316 p.Duncan-Jones, Arthur Stuart. The Soul of Czechoslovakia. The Czechoslovak Nation’s Contribution to Christian Civilization. London: Herbert Barker, 1941. 63 p.Dvornik, Francis. Byzantine Missions among the Slavs. SS. Constantine-Cyril and Methodius. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1970. 484 p. Hnik, Frank M., Frank Kovar and Alois Spisar Prague: Central Council of the Czechoslovak Church, 1937. 101 p.Hnik, Frank Martin. The Philanthropic Motive in Christianity. An Analysis of the Relations between Theology and Social Service. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1938. 328 p. Hromadka, Josef L. Thoughts of a Czech Pastor. London: SCM Press,1970. 117 p.Kantor, Marvin. The Origins of Christianity in Bohemia. Sources and Commentary. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1990. 299 p. Lochman, Jan Milic. Church in th a Marxist Society . A Czechoslovak Case. London: SCM Press, 1970. 198 p.Nemec, Ludvik. Church and State in Czechoslovakia. Historically,Juridically and Theologically Documented. New York: Vantage Press, 1955. 577 p.Nemec, Ludvik. The Infant of Prague. The Story of the Holy Image and the History of the Devotion. New York: Benzinger, 1958. 304 p.Nemec, Ludvik. The Czechoslovak Heresy and Schism. The Emergence of a National Czechoslovak Church. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1975. 78 p. Nemec, Ludvik. The Lady of Hostyn. Queen of the Marian Garden of the Czech, Moravian, Silesian and Slovak Madonnas. New York: RCH Press, 1981. 171 p.Nemec, Ludvik. Antonin Cyril Stojan, Apostle of Church Unity. Human and Spiritual Profile. New Rochelle, NY: Don Bosco

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Publications, 1983. 233 p.Rican, Rudolf. The History of the Unity of Brethren. A ProtestantHussite Church in Bohemia and Moravia. Bethlehem, PA: Moravian Church in America, 1992. 439 p.Spinka, Matthew. John Amos Comenius. That Incomparable Moravian. Chicago: University of Chicago, 1943. 177 p. Spinka, Matthew. John Hus’ Concept of the Church. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1966. 432 p. Spinka, Matthew, John Hus. A Biography. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1968. 344 p. Spinka, Matthew. John Hus and the Czech Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968. 344 p.Wagner, Murray L. Petr Chelcicky. A Radical Separatist in HussiteBohemia. Scottsdale, PA: Herald Press, 1983. 219 p.Weltsch, Ruben E. Archbishop John of Jenstein (1348-1400). Papalism, Humanism and Reform in Pre-Hussite Prague. The Hague: Mouton, `968. 252 p.,Zeman, Jarold Knox. The Anabaptists and the Czech Brethren in Moravia 1526-1628. A study of Origins and Contacts. The Hague: Mouton, 1969. 407 p.

2. Judaism

Altshuler. David, ed. The Precious Legacy. Judaic Treasures from the Czechoslovak State Collecxtions. New York: Summit Books, 1983. 288 p. Berger, Natalia, ed. Where Cultures Meet. The Story of the Jews of Czechoslovakia. Tel Avis: Gefen, 1991 222 p. Berkley, George. E. Hitler’s Gift. The Story of Theresienstadt. Boston: Branden Books, 1993. 308 p. Bloch, Chayim. The Golem. Legends of the Ghetto of Prague. Blauvelt, NY: Rudolf Steiner Publications, 1972. 244 p. David, Abraham, ed. A Hebrew Chronicle from Prague. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1993. 106 p. Fiedler, Jiri. Jewish Sights of Bohemia and Moravia. Guide Book. Prague: Sefer, 1991. 224 p. Friedlander, Albert H. Leo Baeck. Teacher of Theresienstadt. New

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York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968. 294 p. Goldsmith, Arnold L. The Golem Remembered, 1909-1980. Variations on a Jewish Legend. Detroit: Wayne University Press, 1981. 181 p.Iggers, Wilma A., ed. The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia. A Historical Reader. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1992. 412 p. Institute of Jewish Affairs. The Use of Antisemitism against Czechoslovakia. Facts, Documents, Press Reports. London: The Institute, 1968. 24 p. Jacoby, Gerhard. Racial State. The German Nationalities Policy inthe Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. New York; Institute of Jewish Affairs, 1944. 355 p.Dolezalova, Jana, Alexandr Putik and Jirina Sedimova. Jewish Customs and Traditions. Prague: The Jewish Museum in Prague, 1994. 84 p. Gruber, Samuel. Survey of Czech Jewish Monuments. New York: Jewish Heritage Council, 1995. 147 p. The Jews of Czechoslovakia. Historical Studies and Surveys. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1968-83. 3 vols. Kieval, Hillel J. The Making of Czech Jewry. National Conflict and Jewish Society in Bohemia, 1870-1918. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. 279 p. Kovaly, Heda. Under a Cruel Star. a Life in Prague, 1941-1968. New York: Penguin Books, 1989. 192 p. Muneles, Otto. Bibliographical Survey of Jewish Prague. Prague: Orbis, 1952. 562 p. Muneles, Otto, ed. Prague Ghetto in the Renaissance Period. Prague: State Jewish Museum, 1965. 130 p. Rybar, Ctibor. Jewish Prague. Notes on History and Culture. A Guidebook. Prague: TV Spektrum, 1991. 301 p. Schiff, Vera. Theresienstadt. The Town the Nazis Gave to the Jews. Toronto: Lugus, 1996.187 p.Sherwin, Byron L. Mystical Theology and Social Dissent. The Life and Works of Judah Loew of Prague. Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1982. 253 p. Shulman, Yaacov D. The Making of Prague. The Story of Rabbi Jehudah Loew. New York: CIS, 1992. 237 p.

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Troller, N orbert. Theresienstadt. Hitler’s Gift to the Jews. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1991. 182 p.Vilimkova, Milada. The Prague Ghetto. Prague, 1993. Volavkova, Hana. The Synagogue Treasures of Bohemia and Moravia. Prague: Sfinx, 1949.38 p. Volavkova, Hana. The Pinkas Synagogue. A Memorial of the Past andof Our Days. Prague: SPN, 1955. 145 p. Wiesel, Elie. The Golem. The Story of a Legend. New York: Summit Books, 1983. 105 p. Winkler, Gershon. The Golem of Prague. A New Adaptation of the Documented Stories of the Golem of Prague. New York: Judaica Press, 1980. 340 p.

F. Education

Centre for Higher Education Studies. Higher Education in the Czech Republic 1998. Prague: Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic, 1998?. 1 v.Comenius, John Amos. The Great Didactic of John Amos Comenius. New York: Russell & Russell, 1967. 2 vols. Chaloupecky, Vaclav. The Caroline University of Prague. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 150 p.Development of Educational System in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic during the School Years 1973/74 and 1974/75. Ministry ofEducation of Czech Socialist Republic and Ministry of Education of Slovak Republic. Prague: The Ministry, 195. 106 p.The Development of the Czechoslovak Educational and Instructive System under the Period 1981-1983. Bratislava: Slovak EducationalLibrary and Institute of Educational Information, 1984. 124 p. Development of Education in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, 1986-1988. International Conference on Education, Geneva, 1988. Bratislava: Slovak Educational Library and the Institute of Educational Library Information, 1988. 144 p. Dobinson, Charles H., ed. Comenius and Contemporary Education. AnInternational Symposium. 1970.Hamburg: UNESCO Institute for Education, 1970. 95 p. Jenik, Pavel. The Czechoslovak Educational System. Prague: Orbis

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Press Agency, 1980. 77 p.Mokosin, Vladislav, ed. Higher Education in the Czech Republic. Praha: Center for Higher Education Studies, 1996. 364 p. Kaskova, Alena, ed. Education in Czechoslovakia. Prague: SPN, 1958. 127 p.Kyralova, Marie and Jana Privratska, eds. Symposium Comenianum 1982. The Impact of J. A. Comenius on Educational Thinking and Practice. Uhersky Brod: Jan Amos Komensky Museum, 1984. 198 p.Mateju, Petr. Beyond Educational Inequality in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Institute of Sociology, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences,1990. 22 p.Mateju, Petr and Blanka Rehakova. Changing Conditions, Changing Values? Changes in the Position and Perception of Education During the Post-communist Transformation. The Cast of the Czech Republic. Prague: Institute of sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 1993. 18 leaves.Monroe, Will S. Comenius and the Beginnings of Educational Reforms. New York: C. Scribner’s Sons, 1900. 184 p. Needham, Joseph, ed. The Teacher of Nations. Addresses and Essaysin Commemoration of the Great Czech Educationalist Jan Amos Komensky. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1942. 99 p. Odlozilik, Otakar. The Caroline University, 1348-1948. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 95 p. Porter. Livingstone. A History of the University of Prague, 1348-1622. Berkeley, 1930. 235 p. Sadler, John E. J. A. Comenius and the Concept of Universal Education. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1996. 318 p. Silny, Josef et al. the Admission and Placement of Students from the Czech and Slovak Federal Republics. Washington, DC: American Association of Collegiate Registrars. 1992. 124 p.Stransky, Rudolf. The Educational and Cultural System of the Czechoslovak Republic. Prague: Zikes, 1938. 142 p. Sturm, Francis H. Training in Democracy. The New Schools of Czechoslovakia. New York: Inor Publishing, 1938. 256 p. Thirty Years of Socialist School in Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. 1945-1975. Prague: SPN, 29 p.Tollingerova, H., and V. Budway. AULA - Annual Digest ‘96. Praha:

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CSCS, 1996. 150 p.Tollingerova, D., H. Sebkova and J. Hendrichova. Research Training in the Czech Republic. Praha: CSVS, 1993. 52 p.

G. The Fine Arts

1. Painting & Sculpture

Baroque in Bohemia. An Exhibition of Czech Art Organized by the National Gallery, Prague. London: Arts Council, 1969. Bialostocki, Jan. The Art of the Renaissance in Eastern Europe: Hungary, Bohemia, Poland. Oxford: Phaidon, 1976. 312 p.Cannon-Brookes, Peter with Jiri Kotalik, Petr Hartmann and VaclavProchazka. Czech Sculpture 1800-1938. London: Trefoil Books, 1983. 128 p. Dvorakova, Vlasta, Josef Krasa, Anezka Merhautova and Karel Stejskal. Gothic Mural Painting in Bohemia and Moravia 1300-1378.London: Oxford University Press, 1964. 160 p. Gawlik, Ladislav. Art in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1985. 61 p.Homolka, J. Late Gothic Art in Bohemia. The Art of the Court Circle from 1471- to 1526. UK: Collets, 1978. 530 p. .Kaufmann, Thomas DaCosta. The School of Prague. Painting at the Court of Rudolf II 1988. Chicgo: University of Chicago Press, 1988. 305 p.Kutal, Albert. Gothic Art in Bohemia and Moravia. London: Hamlyn,1972. 212 p. Masterpieces of Czech Art. Sponsored by the Edinburgh Society. Edinburgh: Royal Scottish Academy, 199. 38 p. Matejcek, Antonin. Czech Gothic Painting. Prague: Melantrich, 1950. 94 p.Neubert, Karel and Jan Kovt. Treasures from te Past. The Czechoslovak Cultural Heritage. Prague: Odeon, 1992. 205 p. The Old Jewish Cemetery in Prague in the Works of Romantic Painters. Prague: State Jewish Museum in Prague, 1982. 40 p.Pecinkova, Pavla. Contemporary Czech Painting. Gordon & Breach Publishing, 1994. 228 p.Pohribny, Arsen and Stefan Tkac. Naive Painters of

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Czechoslovakia. London: Hamlyn, 1967. 159 p. Porter, Tim. Prague. Art and History. Prague, 1992. Schwarzenberg, Karl v. et al. The Castle of Prague and Its Treasures. London: Flint River Press, 1994. 272 p. Stejskal, Karel. European Art in the 14th Century. London: Octopus Books, 1978. 240 p. Svacha, Rostislav, ed. Devetsil. Czech Avant-garde of the 1920s and 30s. Oxford: Museum of Modern Art, 1990. 115 p. Wirth, Zdenek, comp. Czechoslovak Art from Ancient Times until the Present Day. Prague: Orbis, 1926. 36 p.

2. Architecture

Architecture in the Czech Republic. Prague, 1993.Elliot, D. and H. Rees. Devetsil. Czech Avant-Garde Art: Architecture and Design of the 1920s and 30s. UK: Museum of Modern Art, 1990. 115 p. Knox, Brian. The Architecture of Prague and Bohemia. London: Faber and Faber, 1965. 168, 64 p.Margolius, Ivan. Cubism in Architecture and the Applied Arts. Bohemia and France 1910-1914. London: North Pomfret, 1979. 128 p.Margolius, Ivan. Prague. A Guide to Twentieth-Century Architecture. London: Artemis London, 1994. 320 p. Mencl, Vaclav. Czech Architecture of the Luxemburg Period. Prague: Arts, 1955. 61 p.Neubert, Karel and Jan Royt. Treasures from the Past. The Czechoslovak Cultural Heritage.Praha: Odeon, 1992. 205 p. Seibt, Ferdinand et al. Gothic Art in Bohemia. Architecture, Sculpture and Painting. Oxford, 1977. ?Svacha, Rostislav. The Architecture of New Prague, 1895-1945. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1995. 573 p.Svaz architektu v CSSR. New Techniques and Architecture in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Union of Architects of Czechoslovakia, 1961. 154 p. Vegesack, Alexander V., ed. Czech Cubism. Architecture,

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Furniture, Decorative Arts. 1910-1926. Princeton Architectural Press, 1992. 337 p.

3. Applied Art and Crafts

Czechoslovakian Glass, 1350-1980. A Special Exhibition of the Corning Museum of Glass. New York: Dover Publications, 1981. 176 p. Divis, Jan. Silver Marks of the world. London: Hamlyn, 1976. 246 p.Foulds, Diane E. A Guide to Czech and Slovak Glass. Prague, 1995.Matejcek, Hubert. Masters of Czech Glass 1945-1965. London: Dan Klein, 1983. 24 p. Pesatova, Zuzana. Bohemian Engraved Glass. Feltham: Hamlyn, 1968.61 p. Poche, Emanuel. Porcelain Marks of the World. London: Hamlyn, 1974. 255 p.

H. Music

1. Surveys

Abraham, Gerald. Slavonic and Romantic Music. Essays and Studies.London: Faber & Faber, 1968. 360 p. Berkovec, Jiri. The Praise of Music. Five Chapters on Czech Musicand Musicians. Prague: Orbis, 1975. 79 p.Gardavsky, Cenek, ed. Contemporary Czechoslovak Composers. Prague: Panton, 1965. 562 p.Karas, Joza. Music in Terezin, 1941-1945. New York: Beaufort Books, 1985. 223 p. Marhounova, Jana. Czech Music in the Web of Life. Prague: Empatie, 1993. 237 p.Newmarch, Rosa. H. The Music of Czechoslovakia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1942. 244 p. 244 p. Nettl, Paul. Forgotten Musicians. New York: Philosophical Library, 1951. 352 p.Orchestral Music in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Artia, 195-. 48 p.

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Tyrrell, John. Czech Opera. New York, 1988. 352 p.Stepanek, Vladimir. An Outline of Czech and Slovak Music. Prague:Orbis, 1960-64. 2 vols.

2. Individual Composers

Bartos, Frantisek, ed. Bedrich Smetana. Letters and Reminiscences. Prague: Artia. 1955. 295 p.Beckerman, Michael, ed. Dvorak and His World. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993. 284 p.Beckerman, Michael. Janacek as Theorist. Stuyvesant, NY, 1994. 141 pBeckerman, Michael and Glen Bauer, eds. Janacek and Czech Music. Proceedings of the International Conference, St. Louis, 1988. New York: Pendragon, 1995. 402 p. Berkovec, Jiri. Josef Suk. Prague: Supraphon, 1969. 93 p.Butterworth, Neil. Dvorak.London: Omnibus Press, 1980. 135 p. Chisholm, Erik. The Operas of Leos Janacek. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1971. 393 p.Clapham, John. Smetana. London: Octagon Books, 1972. 161 p. Clapham, John. Dvorak. London: David & Charles, 1979. 235 p.Dvorak, Otakar. Antonin Dvorak, My Father. Spillville, IA: Czech Historical Research Center, 1993. 195 p. Hoffmeister, Karel. Antonin Dvorak. London: John Lane, 1928.Hollander, Hans. Leos Janacek. His Life and Work. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1963. 222 p.Holzknecht, Vaclav. Antonin Dvorak. Prague: Orbis, 1977. 3rd ed. 83 p.Horsbrugh, Ian. Leos Janacek. The Field that Prospered. London: David & Charles, 1981. 327 p.Hughes, Gervase. Dvorak. His Life and Music. London: Cassell, 1967. 247 p.Large, Brian. Smetana. London: Duckworth, 1970. 473 p.Layton, Robert. Dvorak Symphonies and Concertos. London: BBC, 1978. 68 p.Martinu, Charlotte. My Life with Bohuslav Martinu. Prague: Orbis Press Agency, 1978. 176 p. Mihule, Jaroslav. Bohuslav Martinu. Prague: Orbis, 1978. 2nd ed.

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72 p. Nolan, Liam. The Life of Smetana. Pain and the Glory. London: Harrap, 1968. 328 p. Safranek, Milos. Bohuslav Martinu. the Man and his Music. London:Dennis Dobson, 1946.135 p. Schonzeler, Hans Hubert. Dvorak. London: Marion Boyars, 1984. 239p.Sourek, Otakar, ed. Antonin Dvorak. Letters and Reminiscences. Prague: Artia, 1954. 234 p. Sourek, Otakar. The Orchestral Works of Antonin Dvorak. Prague: Artia, 1956. 351 p.Stedron, Bohumir, ed. Leos Janacek. Letters and Reminiscences. Prague: Artia, 1955. 233 p. Susskind, Charles. Janacek and Brod. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1985. 169 p. Tausky, Vilem and Margaret Tausky, eds. Janacek. Leaves from hisLife. London: Kahn & Averill, 1982. 159 p. Tyrrell, John. Leos Janacek : Katya Kabanova. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982. 234 p. Vogel, Jaroslav. Leos Janacek. A Biography. London: Orbis Publishing, 1981. 439 p.

I. Theatre and Cinema

“About Theatre.” Texts from the Samizdat Periodical with the SameName. Translations from the Czech by A. G. Brain. Stockholm: Charta 77 Foundation, 1989. 91 p. Goetz-Stankiewicz, Marketa. The Silenced Theatre. Czech Playwrights without a Stage. Toronto; University of Toronto Press, 1979. 319 p.Honzl, Jindrich. The Czechoslovak Theatre. A Collection of Informative Material on Theatrical Activities in Czechoslovakia. Prague: Orbis, 1948. 144 p. Liehm, Antonin, Closely Watched Films. The Czechoslovak Experience. White Plains, NY: International Arts and Sciences Press, 1974. 485 p. Liehm, Mira and Antonin J. Liehm. The Most Important art.

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Eastern European Film after 1945. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1977. 467 p. Paul, David W., ed. . Politics. Art and Commitment in the East European Cinema. London: Macmillan, 1983. 314 p.Pleskacova, Jana, Miroslava Prikylova and Vera Ptackova, eds. TheBaroque Theatre in the Chateau of Cesky Krumlov.Praha: Divadelni ustav, 1993. 227 p. Rotte, Joanna. Scene Change. A Theatre Diary: Prague, Moscow, Leningrad. New York Limelight Edition, 1994. 161 p. Skvorecky, Josef. All the Bright Young Men and Women. A Personal History of the Czech Cinema. Toronto: Peter Martin Associates, 1971. 280 p. Skvorecky, Josef. Jiri Menzel and the History of the Closely Watched Trains. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1982. 100 p.Slater, Thomas J. Milos Forman. A Bio-Bibliography. New York: Greenwood Press, 1987. 193 p.

J. Sport and Recreationa. General

Kotrba, Jan, Zdenek Illman and Jiri Kossl. Czechoslovakia and Olympic Games. Prague: Orbis, 1984. 133 p.Lipsky, Zdenek. The Czechoslovak Spartakiad 1985. Prague: Orbis, 1984. 48 p. Milne, Armour. Czechoslovak Sport, 1945-1955. Prague: Orbis, 1955. 58 p.Riordan, James, ed. Sport under Communism: The USSR, Czechoslovakia, the GDR, China, Cuba. London: C. Hurst, 1981. 181p. Toufar, F. A. Sokol. The Czechoslovak National Gymnastic Organization. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1941. 66 p. Twenty Years of Czechoslovak Physical Training, 1945-1965. Prague: Sport and Tourism Pub. House, 1965. 61 p.Zemanova, Marie. Czechoslovak Sport Goes Ahead. Prague: Orbis, 1955. 17 p.

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b. Individual Sport Figures

Altman, Linda Jacobs. Martina Navratilova. Tennis Fury. St. Paul:EMC Corp., 1976. 40 p.Blue, Adrianne. Martina. The Lives and Times of Martina Navratilova. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Pub. Group, 1995. 227 p. Burgan, Michael. Dominik Hasek. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers, 1999. 64 p. Dolan, Edward F. and Richard B. Lyttle. Martina Navratilova. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1977. 81 p. Elliot, Chip. Ivan Lendl. Mankato, MN: Crestwood House, 1988. 48 p. Knudson, R. Rozanne. Martina Navratilova, Tennis Power. New York:Puffin Books, 1986. 57 p.Kozik, Frantisek. Zatopek, the Marathon Victor. A Reportage on the World’s Greatest Long-distance Runner. Prague: Artia, 1954. 216 p. Navratilova, Martina with George Vecsey. Being Myself. London: Collins, 1985. 272 p. Pachman, Ludek. Checkmate in Prague. London: Faber & Faber, 1975.216 p. Schabner, Dean. Jaromir Jagr (Ice Hockey Legends). Chelsea House Publishers, 1997. 64 p.Scott, Eugene L. Ivan Lendl’s Power Tennis. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983. 120 p. Zwerman, Martin and Martin Duberman, eds. Martina Navratilova. New York: chelsea House Publishers, 1995.

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