UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, 7th Annual International Postgraduate Conference
Inclusion Exclusion
Saturday 18 February 10:00 – 11:30: Panel H3: Post-Communist Politics
James Krapfl (University of California, Berkeley): ‘Excluding the People, Excluding Themselves: 1989 and the Czech Dissident Myth’
It is often claimed that the non-violent and self-limiting character
of the “Velvet” Revolution in Czechoslovakia can be attributed directly
to the nonpolitical politics of prominent dissidents under Communism,
one author going so far as to claim that the Revolution was a play
directed by Václav Havel, following a script that the dissidents had
written. Given the social isolation of the dissidents and popular
unfamiliarity with their political thought prior to the revolution,
however, this notion of “deterministic dissidence” is problematic. How
did dissident ideas diffuse rapidly enough and in such a way that the
revolutionary actions of a sufficient number of actors could have been
influenced by these ideas? To date, no account has tackled this
question in any but a cursory fashion. This paper, therefore, sets out
to test the deterministic dissidence thesis by analyzing evidence of
diffusion contained in the flyers and bulletins of the revolution
between its start on November 17, 1989 and Havel’s election as
president on December 29 of that year.
My concern is therefore not with high politics—where it can clearly be
demonstrated that dissidents and their ideas played a crucial role—but
with the politics of the street. The debate on the relevance of
dissident political theory to this politics began in the revolution
itself between proponents of what might be called “preparation” and
“spontaneity” theses. The preparation thesis that dissidents had made
the revolution possible. The spontaneity thesis, on the other hand,
maintained that dissidents had done no more than anticipate the
revolution, which was a spontaneous awakening of the entire nation (or
nations). Both theses, not coincidentally, had their roots in an
earlier debate within Charter 77 between proponents of Václav Benda’s
“parallel polis” and Jan Patočka’s “solidarity of the shaken.”
I argue that both interpretations of the dissidents’ role are
fundamentally myths structured around sacrifice. The type of structure
differs, however, and is significant. The Bendian notion of a parallel
polis, while it need not necessarily imply perception of difference
between self and other, generally tends to do so. It is very easy from
the Bendian perspective to see those inside the parallel polis as
innocent victims sacrificed by culpable members of outside society,
thus re-introducing radical difference between self and other. For
Patočka, every individual in modern society is a potential sacrificial
victim, and the solidarity of the shaken results directly from the
victims’ dawning awareness of this fact. Solidarity is based on seeing
the self in the other, which makes the transcendence of sacrificial
forms of social organization theoretically possible. Thus Benda’s
perspective merely inverts the sacrificial system, while Patočka’s
suggests the possibility of transcending it. In short, by emphasizing
their pre-revolutionary sacrifices and their special role in
“preparing” the revolution, many dissidents actually sanctioned their
renewed marginalization, and missed an opportunity to give their most
radical ideas genuine popular currency.