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Two Underdogs and a Cat: Three Reflections on Communism (What Was Communism?) (Hardback)
$16.16 - Save $2.13 (11%) - RRP $18.29 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Two Underdogs and a CatPresents an unorthodox, imaginative take on the transition from Communism to capitalism in the former Soviet Union. This title features three stories that are unified by questions such as: Are democracy and capitalism really a change for the better? Is there such a thing as collective responsibility? And how do we remember and understand our past?
Full description- Publisher: Seagull Books London Ltd
- Published: 01 November 2009
- Format: Hardback 112 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Contemporary Fiction | Short Stories | Marxism & Communism | Social & Political Philosophy
- ISBN 13: 9781906497286 ISBN 10: 1906497281
- Sales rank: 255,921
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Full description for Two Underdogs and a Cat
Croatian writer Slavenka Drakulic here presents an unorthodox, imaginative take on the transition from Communism to capitalism in the former Soviet Union. Three characters - a dog, an underdog, and a cat - offer the reader narratives that reflect on life under Communism and what has followed in its wake. The first, "An Interview with the Oldest Dog in Bucharest," is about a dog named Charlie, whose mother, Mimi, together with thousands of other pets, was thrown out into the street during the Ceausescu regime. In this interview, Charlie describes how not only people but animals, too, became victims during the destruction of downtown neighborhoods in Bucharest in order to build a pyramid-like 'Palace of the People'. In "A Guided Tour of the Museum of Communism," a sixty-year-old souvenir vendor-cum-cleaning woman in Prague reflects upon the meaning of such a museum and concludes wryly that she herself is possibly the museum's best exhibit. Finally, "A Cat-keeper in Warsaw" describes an encounter with a person "of feline origin" who claims to be in possession of the cat-keeper called 'General' who declared martial law in Poland on December 13, 1981. The three stories are unified by powerful, but troubling questions: Are democracy and capitalism really a change for the better? Is the idea of social justice lost forever? Is there such a thing as collective responsibility? And how do we remember and understand our past?

