Czechs, Germans, Jews - in the portrayal of living together in Prague in the early twentieth century, Pavel Eisner's diagnosis of a threefold ghetto prevailed - the tendency towards strong demarcations. In contrast, the worshops of the research network Prague as a hub of European Modernism(s) were focussed od recent theories of interculturality and on the social and cultural construction of spaces.
This book documents how it brings to the foreground the discursive dynamics that characterized both collective and individual identity-building processes and the emergence of literary communication communities.