DOBROTA PUCHEROVÁ
Slovak Academy of Sciences (Bratislava, Slovakia)
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Cabaret Theatre in Communist Czechoslovakia
(1960s–1980s) as Political Resistance:
The Case of Milan Lasica and Július Satinský
Cabaret Theatre in Communist Czechoslovakia (1960s–1980s) as Political Resistance: The Case of Milan Lasica and Július Sa-
tinský. he article analyses the cabaret theatre of Milan Lasica (1940–) and Július Satinský (1941–2002),
also known as L+S, in socialist Czechoslovakia in the 1960s–1980s as a form of resistance against com-
munist totalitarianism. Rather than conventional political satire, which would have been impossible at
the time, their texts subverted the political discourse by focusing on the word, the prime instrument of
state propaganda, to expose its falseness through linguistic games and free play with associations. he
essence of their satire, which can be most closely described as a mixture of theatre of the absurd and
Dadaism, was in pointing to the meaninglessness of the language of communist ideology that bore no
correspondence to reality, since the regime heavily invested in constructing and maintaining artiicial
realities and simulacra. However, their target was not high-ranking communists, but the common
people, who internalized the discourses, values, and practices of the system and held it in place.
Keywords: anti-communist resistance, intellectual dissent in Czechoslovakia, Milan Lasica, Július Satin-
ský, theatre of the absurd, Dadaism, existentialism, cabaret theatre
MISCELLANEA POSTTOTALITARIANA WRATISLAVIENSIA 1(5)/2016
DOI: 10.19195/2353-8546.1(5).4
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Address: Institute of World Literature, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Konventná 13, 811 03 Brati-
slava, Slovakia. E-mail: dobrota.pucherova@savba.sk.
Miscellanea Posttotalitariana Wratislaviensia 5/2016
© for this edition by CNS