While many Czech intellectuals living abroad have been called to return, they have not been asked.
In 1830 the museum absorbed the Matice česká, a society of Czech intellectuals devoted to the publication of scholarly and popular books.
Tomáš Halík (born June 1, 1948 in Prague) is a Czech public intellectual, Roman Catholic priest, and scholar.
He was a close friend of Bohumil Hrabal, another Prague writer, and is one of the most influential Czech intellectuals of the 20th century.
Its purpose was to aid dissident or persecuted Czech intellectuals.
A number of young Czech intellectuals in exile tried to publish the magazine in its form incarnation and named it Skutečnost.
This show also had a political background of Czech intellectuals looking toward France appealing on French republicanism freedom of arts and aesthetic forms.
Czech intellectuals have an anti-clerical tradition, he said, particularly in the more secularized regions of Bohemia and Moravia, which he called "atheistic space."
Rock'n'Roll drew on fierce political arguments among Czech intellectuals, yet also contains a lament for the erosion of freedoms in Britain's own "democracy of obedience".