Proč (někteří) Češi nemají rádi Sudety 

[ENG, Czech version below] Based on two examples from the contemporary public debate, Karina Hoření describes why some Czechs avoid the term “Sudety” and why this term carries negative connotations in Czech language. The first example refers to a lookout tower on the Czech-Polish border in the Orlické Mountains and differences between Polish and Czech conceptualizations of the term. The aforementioned tower stood on the top of Vrchmezí / Orlica as early as in the 19th century, when this area was a part of Prussia. Currently, the lookout was restored and in the vicinity of a new tower, an information board with bilingual sign was put. While in Polish, it informs that the original lookout tower stood in the “Sudety”, the Czech translation uses more scientific term “Krkonošsko-jesenická subprovincie”. Then, Karin exemplifies a range of emotions the term “Sudety” carries in Czech language. The second example comes from a Facebook discussion on the page of a liquor store that sells apple schnapps under the name of “Sudeten Schnaps”. Many of the discussants find this name inappropriate: for them the “Sudety” are clearly associated with Nazism. For many people, the history of 1938, when the First Czechoslovak Republic was divided by the Third Reich, still overlays any other meanings of the word “Sudety” and is highly emotionally charged. Within the project we propose to look beyond the common identification of “Sudety” with a particular point in Czech history, i.e. Munich agreement, and to look at the particular cultures that emerged there post-1945.