
Kniha smíchu a zapomnění
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Marxism–Leninism
Public / private
Prague Spring 1968
Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia
Everyday Life
Article in the conference collection What is the Political Novel? Defining the Genre, published in June 2025 at Open Research Europe.
The paper examines the relation of the form of political novel to perceptions. Three possibilities are analysed. First, when the political novel shares perceptions of the hegemonic power. Second, when the novel trains how to suspiciously and critically reveal hegemonic manipulations of perceptions. Third, where the form of the novel enhances and emancipates perceptive faculties of readers and allows them to project new democratic activities. This three-fold relation is also referred to cartographic activities (including cartographies of time) as depicted in political novels.
Marxism–Leninism
Public / private
Prague Spring 1968
Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia
Everyday Life
Feminism
Sexual Revolution
French Postwar Politics
Petty-bourgeoisie
Politics of literature • Political novel
This Collection brings together selected contributions to the first annual CAPONEU conference, which took place in Berlin from 27 to 29 September 2023. The participants discussed a variety of understandings of the political novel as a (tentative) genre. They combined approaches to defining the political novel that are characterised by genre theory with those that are shaped by the history of the genre, thus also paradigmatically illustrating this changeable category in relation to specific novels that have emerged in heterogeneous contexts. The Collection was published on the Open Research Europe platform (open access).