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Starbucks brings us up to date with Civilization
Prague
I love coffee. I can live like a cactus for days on end, subsisting only on juice from the coffee bean and nicotine-enhanced cellulose fumes. Black, white, anything, coffee is good stuff, and I'm certain that it is just as responsible for speeding up the progress of human existence as, say, DARPA or the Cold War.

What, then, is exactly wrong with Starbucks' arrival in Prague? It's just another cafe among hundreds is the facile answer, and the wrong one of course. Just as American citizens have more weight on their shoulders for the state of global affairs than say a Moldavian citizen, Starbucks strikes a chord with everyone. It's a symbol of something far greater than just coffee that's roasted too dark. It's the neo imperialism. It's McDonalds. This Starbucks on Malostranske Namesti might not be as momentous as the McDonalds in Moscow, but it's on the same track. Prague is not that wild place anymore. You can't buy a house for pennies or have a different supermodel girlfriend for every day of the week. You can't buy ten beers for your local equivalent of one (with a few exceptions). Yes, Prague is part of Western Europe now.

As with other fashionable things that have swept through this land - communism, plastic windows, and suburbs - Starbucks is arriving on the wrong side of the hump, just a bit too late. Just at the moment it's becoming uncool in other places, they arrive here, hoping for some last residual vapors of coolness among people who haven't heard yet.

To top it all off, let's remember the location of this the very first Starbucks in Prague (and all of so-called Central Europe at that): in the same location as Malostranska Kavarna, a centuries-old cafe that closed just a few years ago to make way for a fancy restaurant. Oh, the irony.

I'd rather not be repulsed at this new arrival in town, but I am. The whole world is now a little bit more homogenous now, and we all lose a little bit. Yes, maybe I can buy decaf whole beans now, but it just isn't worth it.

Like with everything else here in Bohemia, we know that these new imperialists will one day leave, like the Russians, and the Germans before that, and so on. Look at <

Copyright: Jeffrey Martin
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 7000x3500
Taken: 24/01/2008
Chargée: 04/09/2008
Published: 04/09/2008
Affichages ::

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Tags: cafe; news
More About Prague

  Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic, has long attracted artists and wandering spirits, although it was originally inhabited by prehistoric fish. Their inland sea filled the basin contained by the Tatras and Carpathian mountains, but when it eventually dried up they were forced to yield the terrain to dinosaurs, wooly mammoths and Neanderthals.     In human times the Celtic tribes came to reside here, leaving remains dating back to the 4th Century B.C.  Their tribal name, Boii, gives the root of the word "Bohemia".  The three separate territories of Bohemia, Silesia and Moravia now make up the modern Czech Republic, which split from Slovakia in the 1993 "Velvet Divorce."     Thanks to its enigmatic founder, the city of Prague derives a magnetic appeal for visionaries, scientists and astronomers.  The historical figure credited with the launch of Prague is Princess Libuse, a visionary prophet and warrior who once stood atop the hill at Vysehrad and made the prophecy as follows,     "I see a vast city, whose glory will touch the stars!"     This indeed came to pass after she took Otokar Premysl to be her husband and King, launching the Premyslid dynasty, and leaving it to rule for the first four hundred years of Czech history.  When the last Premyslid king, Wenceslas III, died without producing a male heir, the fourteen year-old John of Luxembourg came to take the throne of the Czech lands.     Hot-headed John died in battle, but his diplomatic son Charles IV inherited the throne and, through keen multi-lingual savvy, managed to both keep it and earn the title "Father of the Czech Nation."     Charles IV was the first of the Holy Roman Emperors here; he ruled during the height of Prague's elegance and splendour. This is the man to know if you want to understand Prague's layout.  He sponsored the construction of such landmarks as the Charles Bridge, the Hunger Wall and St. Vitus' Cathedral, as well as personally designing the neighborhood called New Town (Nove Mesto) which has for its center Karlovo Namesti or Charles Square.     The city displays every branch of architecture across the last thousand years, including Cubism, a style which you will be hard-pressed to find applied to buildings anywhere else in the world.  Beyond the stunning visual makeup of the city, there is a wealth of nightlife and entertainment, beginning with the legendary concert halls including the Rudolfinum, National Theater, Estates Theater and the Municipal House.     After investigating the Castle and Bridge, which are the most heavily-trafficked tourist areas, take a look around Zizkov and Letna, two of the cooler neighborhoods for bars and restaurants.     However quiet it may seem after ten PM, Prague is alive and throbbing in an endless array of basement bars, pubs, clubs, discos and pool halls waiting to be discovered by the intrepid subterranean adventurer.  To get an idea of what lies in store, check out the panoramas for Chateau and Palac Akropolis and when you're out and about, make sure you look for the stairs down to the cellar.      Apart from shopping, eating, drinking and wearing out your digital camera, delve into the rich green carpet of Prague's parks, many of which lie only walking-minutes from the city center.Text by Steve Smith.


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