This article, which introduces the first block of essays in the current issue of Soudobé dějiny , presents the international project ‘Hidden Paths/Postranní cesty/Schleichwege/Drogy boczne/Köztes Terei: Informal Contact between People from Socialist Countries, 1945–89. Between a Transnational History of Everyday Life and Cultural Transfer’. The project was carried out in 2006–08 thanks to funding from the Volkswagen Foundation. Its cornerstone was a research group comprising German, Polish, Hungarian, and Czech scholars, and with the collaboration of others. Among these scholars were the authors of the articles in the main thematic block of this issue. The project mainly focused on four central European Communist countries – East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Hungary – in which, since the 1960s, tourism began to be intensively developed in connection with state-promoted economic integration, the ideology of socialist internationalism, the expansion of leisure for the whole population, and general trends of civilization. This, however, also opened up space for informal contact and activity. From the point of view of the régimes, these contacts were sometimes problematic or outright ‘subversive’, particularly since the authorities were unable to monitor or regulate them completely. The aim of the project was to consider the various forms of contacts and activities, particularly in the sphere of tourism, illicit or illegal trade, and cultural transfers between the countries of east-central Europe. The results of the project are being published in German, Hungarian, Polish, and Czech.
From an analysis of key moments in history, which could have considerably influenced the course and extent of the expulsion of the Germans from Czechoslovakia in 1945–47, the author sketches out possible consequences that a large number of Germans’ remaining in Czechoslovakia would have had on the political, economic, and social development of Czechoslovakia from the liberation in 1945 to the end of the Communist régime in late 1989 and, in some respects, also in the period that followed. The basic premise of the article is that in any event at least a partial expulsion would have been carried out and at most one and half million Germans would have remained in Czechoslovakia. Such a large number of Germans remaining in the country might have modifi ed some of the conditions of Czechoslovak economic and social development, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, but would most likely not have had any substantial effect on developments in the country in the second half of the twentieth century or on the present Czech state or Czech-German relations today.
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