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Regeneration

Hear the Voices of All: Perceptions of Decolonization in the Czech Republic

When it comes to decolonization, which voices are we no longer hearing? A possible answer to this question and a deeper insight into the understanding of decolonization in the Czech Republic is provided by an interview with visual culture theorist and sociologist Andrea Průchová Hrůzová.

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Parts

  1. Matěj Pavlík, Jiří Žák, The Practice of Decolonization
  2. Hopeful Visitors and Grieving Guides - Notes from the Travel Notebook of a Dark Tourist
  3. Decolonizing the Academy by Sindre Bangstad
  4. The Disquieting Beauty of Wind Farms. Voices and Wind
  5. Places from the Travel Notebook of a Dark Tourist (Fosen Wind Complex)
  6. Who Are You, You Who Live Here?
  7. Tracing Decolonial Options in the History of Sami Educational Philosophy by Stine H. Bang Svendsen
  8. Arts, Crafts And Emancipation
  9. The Exploration and Investigation of Decolonization as Community, as Action and as a Part of a Pedagogy of Care by Amanda Fayant
  10. The Four Directions a.k.a The Medicine Wheel by Amanda Fayant
  11. What Happened To You, Norway?
  12. Places from the Travel Notebook of a Dark Tourist (Utøya)
  13. Hear the Voices of All: Perceptions of Decolonization in the Czech Republic
  14. Slyšet hlasy všech: vnímání dekolonizace v České republice (česká verze)
  15. Measuring Gustav Vingeland's sculptures

Hear the Voices of All: Perceptions of Decolonization in the Czech Republic

Andrea works at the Institute of Contemporary History, where she is currently (2024) completing a three-year project addressing the public presentation and reception of decolonization in the Czech context. Here she also names an essential characteristic of the decolonization process as (among other things) a process of rearticulation of historical narratives. In other words, “history always serves as a kind of weapon, or at least a platform on which the present is negotiated.”

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