SURVEY OF RECENT RESEARCH
Historical and Political Studies on Czechoslovakia Since
1948
By
M.L. Sondhi
Reprinted from
International Studies
Quarterly
Journal of the Indian School of International Studies
New Delhi, Vol.
IV, No. 4, April 1965
Czechoslovakia
has been conspicuously involved in the significant events of
our century. The materials available are so vast and of
infinite variety that a comprehensive introduction to
Czechoslovakia has either to overlook differences between
different ideologies and traditions and provide a mere
recital of events, or alternatively the writer allows the
work to reflect his emotional views, and the objection can
be brought against his book, that what he does not say is
more important than what he does say. Among recent general
works which are comprehensive, realistic, fair and readable,
we can specially mention Professor S. Harrison Thompson’s
revised edition of an earlier work Czechoslovakia in
European History.1 This book should prove helpful to the student who is new to
this area in developing insight into the important
historical themes and the general ideas which are necessary
to understand the evolution of Czechoslovak politics.
Another work which is of considerable value as an
introduction and can usefully supplement Thompson’s book is
J. Lettrich’s History of Modern Slovakia.2 The author gives the history of Slovakia in modern times.
His analysis of the separatist movement penetrates the
surface of events, and shows altogether a balanced
judgement.
Apart from these historical studies, Miss H. Wanklyn’s
Czechoslovakia : A Geographical and Historical Study3
is an essential introductory work. A student of
contemporary Czechoslovakia may find her treatment of
economic history and political developments quite
out-of-date; nevertheless, this excellently written work
will compel attention and will provide him with the basis
for a systematic study of the area. The maps in the volume
are first-rate.
Historiography
During the Narodni probuzeni (the National Awakening) in the
first half of the 19th century there was
remarkable progress in the field of social sciences which
created the basis for high standards in scholarly research
and criticism. It was only natural that freedom from
foreign subjugation in 1918 should provide considerable
stimulus to historical studies and to an increasing emphasis
on the study of international relations. Czechoslovakia’s
active role at the League of Nations also helped to develop
a creative interest in the study of international relations
in Prague and other centres of study in the country. The
work of this period provides evidence of the coexistence of
different philosophical systems in the academic world. The
rise of Hitlerism and the convulsions
in Europe after
1938 led to a series of changes in the political pattern of
Czechoslovakia which have had their repercussions on the
academic field. Three trends are specially significant.
One relates to the consequences which followed from the
impact of Nazi aggressiveness and its condonation in the
initial stages by the Western governments. The second is
the integration of the political, economic and social life
of the country with Marxist ideology. Here it may be noted
that the use of ideological terminology in academic work may
sometimes impede objectivity, but does not in all cases rule
out real progress in historical writing and in the analysis
of international relations. The third trend is made up of
the political forces and interests which involve
Czechoslovakia in the Cold War. These provide serious
difficulties in the delimitation of judgements based upon
historical knowledge from the practical questions of
possible political adjustments, which are of basic
importance to the two power blocs. Czechoslovakia, as a
small country, is still the object of great power politics.
A
considerable amount of literature on the materialistic
interpretation of history has been produced by Czechoslovak
Marxists. Two of Zdenek Nejedly’s recent writings,
Definy Soveikibo Svazu (History of the Soviet Union)4
and O Symslu ceskych dijin (On the Meaning of Czech
History)5
give an adequate idea of his importance as a Marxist
historian. Nejedly who died recently, made outstanding
contributions to the social sciences as well as to the arts
(particularly music) since the close of the last century,
and invigorated the intellectual life of his nation. It is
interesting to trace the development of his approach to
history and politics from a position where he was close to
the positivist views of his teacher Goll to a later frankly
Marxian approach. Other prominent writers on historiography
who are rigidly Marxist but lack the rich experience of
Nejedly’s contact with a variety of historical methods are
O. Riha, V. Husa, J. Macek, J. Cesar, F.M. Bartos, F. Kavka,
P.Oliva, V.Kral, J. Krizek, A. Mika and Z. Solle.
Historical writing in Czechoslovakia has profited in the
spheres of economic and social history on account of the
emphasis on Marxian historiography. It is to be regretted,
however, that in political history some works have appeared
which are merely polemical in nature. Although some parts
of M. Gus’s Americki imperialisti – inspiratori
Mnicbovskej politiky (American Imperialists –
Instigators of the Munich policy)6
and J.S. Hajek’s Wilsonska legenda v dejinacb CSR
(The Wilson Legend in the CSR History)7
are skilfully written, such books cannot be regarded as
presenting objective analyses.
One would welcome some rethinking on the
question of periodisation. An idea of the general approach
of Marxist historians can be had from V. Husa’s Epochy
ceskych dejin (Periods of Czech History).8
If historical trends in neighbouring Poland are any guide,
it may not be unexpected that in the future we may get some
proof that conflicting tendencies have been at work within
the Marxian framework of Czechoslovak historiography.
Historical
Analysis
The Hussite
period (14th and 15th centuries) has
continued to attract the interest of Czechoslovak and
foreign scholars and there are several new works which have
added to the understanding of historical details as well to
the evaluation of religious, political, social and economic
doctrines which influenced this important period of Czech
history. A useful reference book for sources on the Hussite
period is J. Macek’s Ktoz jsu bozi bojovnici (Ye
warriors of God).9
Macek’s two other books, Husitske revolucni hnuti
(The Hussite Revolutionary Movement)10
and Tabor v busitskem revolucnim hnuti (Tabor in the
Hussite Revolutionary Movement)11
deal with the roots of the Hussite movement and the
assessment of its significance in the context of
anti-feudalism. He also analyzes it as a national
liberation movement and makes many interesting observations
on the character of Hussite culture. The significance of
Hussitism for other countries is also pointed out. The
value of this work from the academic point of view is
somewhat diminished on account of certain parts where the
author seems to be anxious to show the connection between
the Hussite tradition and the inspiration of the socialist
ideology of present-day Czechoslovakia.
A
very objective analysis of the Hussite period is found in
the writings of Professor R.R. Betts of London University.
Among his recent contributions are two short studies:
Social and Constitutional Development in the Hussite Period12 and
Some Political Ideas of the Early Czech Reformers.13
Professor Betts’s work in guiding research in
Czechoslovak studies at London University is altogether a
unique and valuable contribution.
The aftermath of the Hussite Wars was marked by
a period in which a movement called the “Unity of Czech
Brethren” developed. It expressed the political and social
ideology of Petr Chelcicky who is included among the
greatest names in his nation. The social radicalism of
Chelcicky brings to mind a later day comparison, that of
Gandhi in India. Up till now the later part of the Hussite
century was neglected by foreign scholars. P. Brock has
filled a gap by producing an excellent study, The
Political and Social doctrines of the Unity of Czech
Brethren in the fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Centuries.14
This book is also of value for the student as an example of
good use of primary and secondary source materials in
Czechoslovak studies.
This Unity of
Czech Brethren had one of its illustrious leaders in J.A.
Komensky, known to the world as Comenius, a truly great
humanist and pedagogue. The greater part of his life was
spent in exile, and belongs to general European history.
Some works dealing with the life and work of Komensky have
appeared recently in Czechoslovakia to which attention may
be invited: Jan Amos Komensky by J. Kopecky, J.
Patocka and J. Kyrasek;15
Knizni dilo Jana Amose Komenskeho (Work of Jan Amos
Komensky) by J. Brambora;16
and a commentary on Komensky’s Public Counsel on the Reform
of Human Affairs entitled Jana Amose Komenskeho Cesta k
vseneprave by J. Popelova.17
The
Thirty Years War and the circumstances and events leading to
the loss of freedom of the Czech nation have been the
subject of several new studies. Significant among these are
two works by J. Polisensky. In Anglie a Bila hora
(England and White Mountain)18
he assesses the significance of the Bohemian war for British
foreign policy and relates it to the nature of the social
and economic struggle in the Bohemian estates. In
Nizo-zemska politika a Bila hora (Dutch Policy and White
Mountain)19
we have a fairly skilful analysis of the Dutch policy in the
same context. A third volume dealing with Spanish policy
(which was not accessible while this paper was written)
promises to be of the same high level as its predecessors.
The Break-up
of Austria-Hungary and
The
Emergence of Czechoslovakia
The transition from the tutelage of the Czechs and Slovaks
under Austria-Hungary to an independent republic can be
traced at various levels. Z.A.B. Zeman’s The Break-up of
the Habsburg Empire 1914-191820
provides the background for a study of the changes resulting
from the conflicting nationalistic tendencies at work in the
Austro-Hungarian empire. C.A. Macartney and A.W Palmer in
their recent work Independent Eastern Europe21
have provided a very informative introduction for this
period in the early part of their book. The Czechoslovak
nationalist revolution can also be viewed in terms of a
wider perspective of Slav-German relations. H. Kohn who is
well known for his monumental work on nationalism has
provided a new study: Pan-Slavism: its History and
Ideology.22
The three parts of this work are “Pan Slavism and the West
1815-1860”; “Pan Slavism and Russian Messianism 1860-1905”;
and “Pan Slavism and the World Wars 1905-1950.” A
perspective on Pan-Slavism is useful but it is doubtful if
this approach can provide help in understanding the historic
changes which were influenced by many political, economic
and military and ideological factors. Some writings from
Germany, like E. Lemberg’s Volksbegriff und
Staatsideologie der Tschen (the Concept
of the People
and the State Ideology of the Czechs)23
incline towards uncritical generalizations, and so do not
reveal an adequate understanding of the resurgence of
national feeling in the Czech lands.
Historical writing in Czechoslovakia has contributed
significantly to the development of an interesting
hypothesis about the emergence of the Czechoslovak State in
terms of social and political change derived from basic
economic changes. O. Riha, whose earlier work
Hospadarsky a socialne-politicky vyvoj Ceskoslovenska
(The Economic and
Socio-political Development of Czechoslovakia)24
is well known, has provided a study with the description
focussed on the behaviour of industrial and pre-industrial
classes on Marxist lines in his O Narodnim hnuti a
narodnostni otazce (About the National Movement and the
National Question).25
Another example of analysis from a Marxian standpoint is
found in J. Krizek’s Prispevek k dejinam rozpadu
Rakouska-Uberska a vzniku Ceskoslovenska (Contribution
to the History of the Disintegration of Austria-Hungary and
the Birth of Czechoslovakia).26
An
excellent book on diplomatic history which includes a
well-documented account of the attitude of the United States
towards the emergence of the Czechoslovak State is The
United States and East Central Europe : A Study in Wilsonian
Diplomacy and Propaganda by V.S. Mamatey.27
The Masaryk
Era
At one time T.G. Masaryk had a secure image in the minds of
all his countrymen irrespective of their ideological
persuasion, much in the same way as Gandhi in India or Sun
Yat Sen in China. There has been a spate of writing in
Czechoslovakia which attempts to reduce seriously the record
of his achievements. There is relentless criticism of
Masaryk in two books by J. Krizek – T.G. Masaryk a cesca
politika (T.G. Masaryk and Czech Politics)28
and T.G. Masaryk a nase delinicka trida (T.G. Masaryk
and our Working Class)29 It
would seem to an outside observer that genuine research is
always impeded when historians and political scientists
become ardent and uncritical admirers or ceaseless
detractors. There is reason to regret the obsessive concern
with the accumulation of evidence that Masaryk was a
counter-revolutionary. Two collections of documents which
were published fail to impress: Dokumenty a protilidove
a protinarodni
politice
T.G.M.
(Documents on the anti-Popular and Anti-National Policy of
T.G.M.)30
and Dokumenty o protisovtiskych piklech ceskoslovenske
reacke: z archivinibo materialu o kontra-revolucni cinnosti
Masaryka a Benese v letech 1917-1924 (Documents on the
anti-Soviet Conspiracy of the Czechoslovak Reactionaries :
from the Archives on the Counter-Revolutionary Activities of
Masaryk and Benes in the years 1917-1924)31.
It
is not easy to anticipate the future attitude towards
Masaryk in Czechoslovakia. The new course initiated by N.S.
Khrushchev in the USSR retains its momentum and has its
repercussions in Czechoslovakia. It is probably fair to
hope that future Czech historians will one day approach
Masaryk’s life and work with an academic temper and avoid
both excessive admiration and hysterical hatred. As a
matter of fact, Z. Nejedly’s biographical work on Masaryk
remains a model of true scholarship whose balanced criticism
should be emulated by some of the younger writers of today
who tend to write exclusively in a tendentious and polemical
manner.
The Munich
Days
The twentieth
anniversary of the Munich pact in 1958 was the occasion for
the publication of documents and studies relating to the
assessment of the crucial events preceding the dismemberment
of Czechoslovakia. The joint publication by the foreign
Offices of Prague and Moscow of the New Documents on the
History of Munich32
touched off a controversy. Soviet and Czech historians
assailed the West for not supporting the Czechoslovak
democracy and claimed that Soviet help was available
although not utilized by the Benes government. In
opposition to this, two studies appeared which pointed out
deficiencies in the New Documents: an article by
William Wallace33
who had earlier been allowed the use of the Foreign Office
archives at Prague and another by F. Vnuk, Munich and the
Soviet Union34
based on documents found in the German Foreign Office after
the fall of Nazi Germany.
To enable the scholar to grasp the significance
of the role of the main participants in the Munich
conference, earlier writings like J.W. Wheeler-Bennett’s
Munich: Prologue to Tragedy35
and R.G.D. Laffan’s Survey of International Affairs
193836
should be supplemented by personal accounts which have now
become available like Memoirs of Dr. Edward Benes: From
Munich to New War and New Victory37
and Fin d’une Europe by G. Bonnet.38
Other important books are Europe in Decay by Sir L.B.
Namier,39
and Germany’s Eastern Neighbours by E. Wiskemann.40
B. Celovsky’s Das Muncbner Abkommen 193841
is the most comprehensive work available on the subject.
There are a considerable number of books and articles whose
main concern is to sympathize with a particular standpoint.
These works should be used with care. Among these, we can
mention: Ian Macleod’s Neville Chamberlain,42
W. Jaksch’s Europas Weg nacb Potsdam43,
H. Raschofer’s Die Sudetenfrage – Ibre wolkerrecbtliche
Entwicklung vom ersten Weltkriege bis zur Gegenwart.44
A
Snejdarek’s writings about this period are based upon a
critical analysis of original sources. One of his articles
deserves a special mention: “The Participation of the
Sudeten-German Nazis in the Munich Tragedy” in Historica.45
V.
Sojak has edited a study on the foreign policy of the
Czechoslovak government in the inter-war period, O
Ceskoslovenske Zabranicni politice v letech 1918-1939
(About Czechoslovak Foreign Policy in the Years 1918-1939)46
which is a skilfully written survey of the international
politics of the period as they affected a small European
Power. The events of Munich are viewed, however, mainly in
terms of a failure of foreign policy which is criticized for
being “western-oriented.” T. Prochazka’s “La
Tchecoslovaquie de Munich a Mars 1938”47
brings out more successfully the insuperable difficulties
which the Benes government faced in its attempts to pursue a
genuine policy of peace.
On the wider subject of Czech-German relations,
there are numerous studies. It is to be regretted that most
of these are highly tendentious in their interpretation of
primary sources.
The German
occupation is the subject of several first-rate
studies. An excellent work is V. Kral’s Otazky
hospodarskebo a socialnibo vyvoje v ceskych zemich
1938-1945 (Questions of Economic and Social
Development in the Czech Lands 1938-1945).48
The programme of aggression and ruthless exploitation of
the Nazi leaders is not perhaps fully comprehended in a
good part of the contemporary world. It is, however,
inevitably a part of the experience of the Czechoslovak
people and old fears and hatreds are not forgotten if a
Cold War continues to cast dark shadows of uncertainty
over the future.
An area of partisan polemics is the subject of the
Slovak Rising during the War. The orthodox Communist
point of view is found in J. Dolezal’s Slovenske
narodni povstani (The Slovak National Uprising).49 Vedecka konferecia o Slovenskom narodom povstani
(Scientific conference on the Slovak National Uprising)50
edited by M. Kropilak provides additional material for
this interpretation. The opposite point of view is
found in an article by I. Duchacek51
and in B.A. Toma’s Soviet Strategy in the Slovak
Uprising.52
There is still a need for an objective study which could
assess the significance of this glorious, through tragic
happening in Slovak history.
The
Events of February 1948
The return of Benes to Prague after the liberation of
Czechoslovakia was widely hailed. Czech foreign policy
henceforth was supposed to aim at making Czechoslovakia
a bridge between East and West. The triumph of the
Communist Party as a result of a cabinet crisis
accompanied by public demonstrations had a marked impact
on world opinion. This event undoubtedly exacerbated
ill-feelings in the East-West contest and became a
turning point in the Cold War. The literature on the
February events in particular and on the post-war
presidency of Benes is extensive. The most detailed
analysis from the non-Communist point of view is in J.
Korbel’s recent book, The Communist Subversion of
Czechoslovakia.53
Korbel’s account is well-documented. It has, however,
to be borne in mind that the author was Private
Secretary to President Benes and his sympathies are
clearly evident. Korbel, however, tries to prove a
controversial theme, namely to interpret the
Communisation of Czechoslovakia as the failure of her
policy of co-existence. The exposition of this point of
view is neither consistent nor convincing. Other
Western accounts which should be referred to include H.G.
Skilling’s articles: “The Break-up of the Czechoslovak
Coalition 1947-48”54
and “The Prague
Overturn in 1948,”55
and H. Seton-Watson’s The East European Revolution.56
The Communist justification for the February events is
found in several books and innumerable articles. J.
Vesely’s Kronika unorovych dnu 1948 (The
Chronicle of the February Days of 1948)57
and G. Spurny’s, Unorove dny (The February Days)58
portray the role of the Communist Party in a favourable
light. It is necessary to examine the views of two of
the chief participants on the Communist side, which are
found in Gottwald’s Kupredu, Zpatky ni krok
(Forward, Not One Step Back)59
and A. Zapotocky’s Revolucni odborove bnuti po unoru
1948 (The Revolutionary Trade Union Movement after
February 1948)60
The
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia
The
development of Czechoslovak communism is part of the
history of Czechoslovakia as an independent state. The
study of the Party’s history involves consideration of
its relationship with the Soviet Communist Party, its
participation in trade union activity, its appeal to the
intellectuals, its attitude to the agrarian problems and
an analysis of the role of its ideology in its struggle
for power. Prehled Dejin komunisticki strany (An
Outline of the History of the Communist Party of
Czechoslovakia)61
and other official publications of the Czechoslovak
Communist Party are as can be expected, laudatory
descriptions of all events in terms favourable to the
present party leadership. V. Kopecky’s 30 let KSC
(Thirty years of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia)62
and similar books present information which strictly
conforms to the official point of view.
Information which can balance the above accounts is
based chiefly upon narratives by those who participated
actively in the struggle between the Communists and
their adversaries and their evaluation can hardly be
expected to be wholly objective. H. Ripka’s Le Coup
de Prague,63
is obviously a book in this category when it is
remembered that the author was a member of the previous
government of Czechoslovakia.
Among the mot detailed studies on
Czechoslovak Communism is E. Taborsky’s Communism in
Czechoslovakia 1948-1960.64
He has consulted almost all sources that were available
outside Czechoslovakia. The work, while useful and
important cannot be said to constitute a definitive
treatment of the subject. It is particularly deficient
in placing the politics of the Communist Party in the
perspective of the Munich period.
Problems of
theory in the Czechoslovak context are not examined in
their relations to the inter-state system of the
communist bloc.
There are several earlier studies which deal with the
Stalinist period and its legacy. It may be said that
most of these books reflect the fears and frustrations
which have been reducing the chances of coexistence and
peace and have failed to contribute to new thinking on
basic policies. We have still to wait for an evaluation
which can take into account the forces which are slowly
but surely eroding the Stalinist ideology.
Two books which show a new and welcome
direction in western writings on Communist rule merit
close attention. R.V. Burkes in The Dynamics of
Communism in Eastern Europe65
has broken new ground. Z.K.Brzezinski has provided an
excellent study of the intricate pattern of politics in
the Soviet bloc today in his book The Soviet Bloc:
Unity and Conflict.66
His book is an important contribution to the study of
post-Stalin developments and is of invaluable help to a
student of Czechoslovak politics. What he says in
conclusion about the Soviet bloc countries applies as
much to Czechoslovakia: “In effect, the internal
processes of change, differentiation, ideological
relativisation and erosion, pointing toward Communist
polycentrism, are engaged in a race with the external
expectations of the Communist elite.”
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