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Publication details

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan

Place: Basingstoke

Year: 1989

Pages: 99-122

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349092864

Full citation:

, "Independent historiography reborn", in: Samizdat and an independent society in Central and Eastern Europe, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 1989

Abstract

No one has analysed more brilliantly the moral and spiritual crisis of contemporary Czechoslavakia, and the fate of its history, than Vaclav Havel, in his now famous letter to Gustav Husak in April 1975.1 "In a society which is really alive", he wrote, "there is naturally always something happening…. Any society that is alive is a society with a history." However, in an "entropic" society, as Havel called it, in which "the mechanical prevails over the vital" and "order without life" exists, true history cannot exist. "In our country, too, one has the impression that for some time there has been no history. Slowly, but surely, we are losing the sense of time. We begin to forget what happened when, what came earlier and what later, and the feeling that it really doesn't matter overwhelms us. As uniqueness disappears from the flow of events, so does continuity; everything merges into the single grey image of one and the same cycle and we say, "There is nothing happening"." In this situation the "disorder of real history" is replaced by the "orderliness of pseudo-history" which is determined not by "the life of society" but by "an official planner".

Publication details

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan

Place: Basingstoke

Year: 1989

Pages: 99-122

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349092864

Full citation:

, "Independent historiography reborn", in: Samizdat and an independent society in Central and Eastern Europe, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 1989