| A talk by Daniel Pratt
 
 
The
 talk will discuss two prominent figures of the Czech 1980s generation, 
brothers Jáchym and Filip Topol. Filip was the lead singer of Psí vojáci (Dog
 Soldiers), a legendary band that played its first concert for Havel 
himself. Jáchym became a popular author of stories and unconventional 
novels. He was also an editor of Revolver Revue, an underground
 periodical. His apartment was the site for numerous dissident 
happenings. Although both brothers became dissidents, and both signed Charter 77, they rejected the notion of a pre-political self and projected an almost nihilistic stance against everything.
			 
 Thursday, November 16, 2023
 Bohemian National Hall
 321 E 73 St, Manhattan
 
Free. Suggested donation $5.00
 Seating is limited. Registration is recommended. REGISTRATION
 
 Daniel W. Pratt  is
 Assistant Professor of Slavic Culture at McGill University. He works on
 Czech, Polish, Russian, Austrian, and Hungarian literature and culture,
 and his interests include narratology, dissent, nationality studies, 
aesthetics, and the intersection of literature and philosophy. His 
current book projects are Against Narrative: Non-narrative Constructions of Temporality in Central Europe and Bruno Jasieński, Internationalist, and
 he has written on Czechoslovak dissident punk rock, 
Gombrowicz’s interactions with Gilles Delleuze, and the meaning of 
history in Central Europe, amongst other topics. For the Fall semester 
of 2023, he is the István Deák Visiting Assistant Professor of East 
Central European Studies at Columbia University. 
				
					
						| 
						This event is organized by the Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences (SVU) New York with the supportof the Bohemian Benevolent and Literary Association (BBLA).
 |  | 
Diskuse