''Worlds of Dissent'' analyzes the myths of Central
European resistance popularized by Western journalists
and historians, and replaces them with a picture of the
struggle against state repression as the dissidents
themselves understood, debated, and lived it. In the
late 1970s, when Czech intellectuals, writers, and
artists drafted Charter 77 and called on their
government to respect human rights, they hesitated to
name themselves ''dissidents.'' Their personal and
political experiences - diverse, uncertain, nameless -
have been obscured by victory narratives that portray
them as larger-than-life heroes who defeated Communism
in Czechoslovakia. Jonathan Bolton draws on diaries,
letters, personal essays, and other first-person texts
to analyze Czech dissent less as a political philosophy
than as an everyday experience. Bolton considers not
only Vaclav Havel but also a range of men and women
writers who have received less attention in the West -
including Ludvik Vaculik, whose 1980 diary ''The Czech
Dream Book'' is a compelling portrait of dissident
life.Bolton recovers the stories that dissidents told
about themselves, and brings their dilemmas and
decisions to life for contemporary readers. Dissidents
often debated, and even doubted, their own influence as
they confronted incommensurable choices and the
messiness of real life. Portraying dissent as a human,
imperfect phenomenon, Bolton frees the dissidents from
the suffocating confines of moral absolutes. ''Worlds of
Dissent'' offers a rare opportunity to understand the
texture of dissent in a closed society. |
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