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Polsko a sto ročníků Slovanského přehledu

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EN
This article, on the basis of the study of one hundred volumes of the Slavonic Review, attempts to present a sketch of the reflection of Polish subjects in this journal. The Slavonic Review was founded as a news periodical, and therefore at the outset there were many texts appearing on its pages from the disciplines of ethnography, linguistics, and literature. This article focuses on the gradual filtering of historical subjects into the Slavonic Review and upon the gradual transformation of the journal into a scholarly periodical in which Czech historians who focus on Poland – as well as their Polish colleagues – published their essays. The article does not present an exhaustive bibliographical summary of Polish studies topics in the Slavonic Review. It is only a sketch of the main trends in the field of the presentation of the history of Poland and of Czech-Polish relations within the Slavonic Review.
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Slovanský přehled a vybrané problémy hungaristiky

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The journal Slavonic Review has been publishing articles on Hungarian-related subjects since its founding. However, the content of these articles has changed over time in accordance with the historical changes that have taken place. This is borne witness in the content as well as the form of articles published in the 1950s and 1960s as well as during the normalization period. After the change of regimes in 1990, topics began to be treated in the articles that had prior to that time appeared only as white spots on the map of Czech Hungarian studies.
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Slovanský přehled a historická slavistika

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EN
The aim of this essay is to explain the significance of the Slavonic Review for the shaping and profiling of the field of historical Slavic studies. Historical Slavic studies is understood here in the sense of Slavonic studies that focus on the inception and development of the ideas of Pan-Slavism and inter- Slavic relations. At the same time, this field is complemented by the history of the field of Slavic studies itself, with which it shares many topical and methodological features. Both fields produce analytical work that is enriched with discussions of the broader contexts made possible by the more general approach.
EN
The aim of this study is to evaluate the material published on the pages of the Slavonic Review from the end of the 1950s to the beginning of the 1970s, including the broader contexts of research into the Soviet Union and Russian history of the 20th century, and the various reflections and interpretations of it. At the same time, broader contexts, particularly the political ones that naturally had a significant influence upon the journal’s publishing policies, are also analyzed. Not only what was published, but also the authors’ formulations, concepts, and the quality of the work all, naturally, reflected their period, which here means the commencement of the normalization era again that again brought an officially-mandated heavily ideologized editorial policy. Just as the atmosphere in Czechoslovakia transformed, so too did the content journal and the requirements for the quality of its writing, and these transformations were all the more apparent in essays dedicated to research into Soviet history, which we could classify with the term “Sovietology”. It was only in the middle of the 1960s that any change was registered in the scope of Soviet-themed essays, their quality was significantly enhanced, and they reflected the contemporary state of the art for research, encompassing subjects that corresponded with modern research trends in the world. With regard to the expanded horizons of information available these essays also reflect the results of Western research and not only for use in criticizing bourgeois Sovietology.
EN
This analytical study discusses the interest among Czech historians who research Russian history spanning from its earliest periods to 1917. It is a case study that demonstrates this interest in the example of the periodical the Slavonic Review. Part of this study is an analysis of the tradition of Czech (Czechoslovak) research into Russian history and the historians’ confrontations on the pages of the Slavonic Review. The work treats the topical and methodological transformations in the research chronologically, and pays tribute to the significant personalities who published historical Russian studies work in this periodical.
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