List of Illustrations
Foreword by Timothy Garton Ash
Editor's Introduction and Acknowledgments
Translators' Introduction
Forbidden Writers in Czechoslovakia
Part I. Literature
Igor Hajek, Samizdat Literature: An Introduction
Alexander Kliment, The Black Thread (1970)
Ivan Klíma, The Eyeglasses (1974)
Pavel Kohout, Golem II (1977)
Jan Trefulka, A Czech Fairy Tale (1976)
Jiŕí Gruša, Uncle Anton's Coat (1977)
Dominik Tatarka, Mystery (1979)
Karel Pecka, Mr. George (1982)
Lenka Procházková, Come Have a Taste (1982)
Eda Kriseová, Morning in Church (1988)
Egon Bondy (pseud.), Gottschalk (1988)
Milan Uhde, My Desk (1989)
Ludvík Vaculík, In Retirement (1986)
A Padlock for Castle Schwarzenberg (1987)
The Last Say (1989)
Bohumil Hrabal, The Magic Flute (1989)
Part II. Cultural & Sociopolitical Perspectives
Paul Wilson, Living Intellects: An Introduction
Jan Patočka, What Charter 77 Is and What It Is Not (1977)
Sidonius and Sakateka (pseud.), Dialogue on Questions (1985)
Milan Jungmann, Kunderian Paradoxes (1985)
Miroslav Kusý, We Central East Europeans (1977)
Zdeněk Urbánek, Only a Postscript (1989)
Jan Lopatkam Bohumil Hrabal in 1989 (1989)
Eva Kantůrková, On the Ethics of Palach's Deed (1989)
Jiřina Šiklová, The "Gray Zone" and the Future of Dissent in Czechoslovakia (1989); Epilogue (1990)
Petr Fidelius (pseud.), The Mirror of Communist Discourse (1989)
Václav Havel, Second Wind (1976); Last Conversation (1977)
Part III. Philosophical Texts
Erazim Kohák, Czech Philosophy in Samizdat: An Introduction
Ivan M. Havel, Modes of Cognition (1985)
Zdeněk Nebauer, On Hard and Soft Style in Philosophy (1985)
Milan Šimečka, On Uncertain Reality and the Possibility of an Agreement (1985)
Ladislav Hejdánek, The Conception of Truth and Its Meontological Preconditions (1985)
Martin Palouš, Philosophy as Personal Experience and the Others (1985)
Radim Palouš, "My" Philosophy (1985)
Tomáš Halík, Ego Dormio (1985)
Zdeněk Kratochvil, Five Letters behind the Golden Curtain (1986)
Notes on Contributors