Václav Havel: Democracy with a Human Face Public

Livingston, Laura (2012)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/bg257f755?locale=fr
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Abstract

Abstract
Václav Havel: Democracy with a Human Face
The public outcries of emotion surrounding Václav Havel's December 18, 2011,
death underscored an unprecedented level of admiration and appreciation for
Czechoslovakia's, and later the Czech Republic's, first post-Communist president.
The international reaction to Havel's death came as a great surprise, given the
numerous reviews of Havel as a political failure. Despite Havel's international
celebrity as a dissident playwright, and recognition as a key figure in the Velvet
Revolution that toppled the Czechoslovak Communist Party in 1989, his continued
dedication to principles of honesty, forgiveness, morality, and personal
responsibility were viewed as politically naïve. On the basis of waning popularity
ratings, inability to control Parliament, and the 1993 dissolution of Czechoslovakia,
Havel's thirteen-year presidency has been labeled a domestic failure. Nevertheless,
many of these reviews quantify Havel's legacy on the basis of solely political factors,
and entirely disregard, or prematurely gauge, Havel's ultimate impact on Czech
society.
This paper will examine the continuities in Havel's political thought from his time as
a dissident playwright to his thirteen years as President. Havel's unabated
dedication to his principles did result in waning popularity ratings, but his repeated
insistences on the importance of infusing morality into all areas of public life proved
instrumental in shaping the Czech Republic into the civil society it is today.
Surrounded by post-communist democracies that have evolved into one-party
states, the Czech Republic exhibits a remarkable level of civic involvement that
precludes this possibility. This is Havel's true legacy, and, in the months following
his death, it is finally being appreciated.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

1. Introduction………………………………………………………………………...................1

2. The Consequences of an Inescapable Paradox……………………………….….. 8

3. Havel ná Hrad…………………………………………………………………....................23

4. A Vision for the Future…………………………………………………………...............33

5. Czechs and
Švjek…………………………………………………………….................................….....54

6. A Belated Appreciation…………………………………………………………...............70

7. Bibliography……………………………………………………………………....................75

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