French historian Muriel Blaive has been a victim of a series of 
fairly incredible media attacks in the Czech right wing press in the 
past few weeks for daring to suggest that the communist regime in 
Czechoslovakia negotiated with the population and was very careful to 
make sure that it did not cause the population to stage a revolution. 
Here is her reaction to the media attacks.
Some
 people asked me if I had an English version of the article "I am 
totalitarianism". I just put it back together from the original 
Czech/English mixture and here it is.
 Muriel Blaive
 Václav Havel, in his essay Stories and Totalitarianism (1987) wrote: 
“Ideology, claiming to base its authority on history, becomes history's 
greatest enemy.” He spoke of course of the communist ideology. But 
today, it is anti-communism that claims to be based on the authority of 
history. It has an answer to everything and can never be faulted: the 
pre-1989 period was evil, and communism is to blame for everything, past
 and present. In this sense, anti-communism also functions like an 
ideology. So the real opposite of “communism” is not “anti-communism”: 
it is, as Havel correctly pointed it out, history. History is doubts, 
debate, dissent. It is the inverted pole of ideology.
 
 
 I write 
this essay as a historian. An interview I did with Veronika Pehe has 
been repeatedly twisted in the Czech press and on social media. Some 
people have commented that as a French woman who did not personally 
experience communism, I was not entitled to write about the history of 
communist Czechoslovakia. Well, if historians could only write about 
what they personally experienced, there would be no antiquity, no 
medieval history, no modern history, not even a history of the First 
World War and soon of the Second World War. It also means that young 
Czechs would not be entitled to write about their country’s past. This 
is of course absurd. No one owns the past. We French learned it the hard
 way when American historian Robert Paxton revolutionised the history of
 the Vichy regime.
 I never experienced the communist rule not 
because I was dazzled by the French communists but because I couldn’t 
stand them: their dogmaticism so repelled me that I refused to 
legitimise “Eastern bloc” regimes by visiting them before 1989. This 
does not mean that I was not interested in those countries. Václav 
Havel, Jan Patočka and others wrote about issues that concern the whole 
of Western civilisation: the loss of values after 1968, consumption 
society as the sole mode of existence, indifference to the other as the 
main mode of communication. I learned from Czech thinkers long before I 
arrived here or even learned Czech. 
 People asked me why I 
refused Martin Veselovský’s invitation to participate to a show on DVTV.
 Just before he issued it, rumours started to circulate that I was an 
“adorator" (sic) of communism, that I was a Marxist or neo-Marxist (a 
“typical Western intellectual”), falsified history, denied the extent of
 communist crimes, supported the Communists, was against the opening of 
the archives or against paying tribute to the victims. Public shaming is
 not conducive to a reflective atmosphere and retweeting any of this 
nonsense, as Veselovský did, hardly bode well of the impending debate. 
The fact that so many people took at face value the lies that were 
propagated about me without bothering to read the actual interview (in 
which I praised the opening of the archives and stressed the need to pay
 tribute to the victims) is disturbing enough. Journalists should aim to
 raise the level of the public debate, not exacerbate its worst traits.
 “Totalitarianism” or however one names the period between 1948 and 1989
 in Czechoslovakia (personally I call it the communist dictatorship) did
 leave traces. A vibrant testimony to the profound destruction of Czech 
critical thinking by the four decades of communist rule is the continued
 societal urge to hear “the truth” from an established authority. To the
 people who long for such a simplified world, let me repeat: the 
opposite of a dogma is not another dogma but doubts, dissent, a lengthy 
debate as opposed to a headline in Rudé právo. No one holds “the 
historical truth”, nor should they. Democracy entails a pluralistic 
society that calls for the confrontation of many opinions, including on 
history. 
 In this context, the totalitarian concept started to 
lose currency in Germany already in 1993. It was replaced by an 
interrogation on “normality”, “agency”, “practices of domination”, 
“everyday experience of the dictatorship”, all concepts that denied the 
notion of total control from above and replaced with a questioning of 
the relationship between rulers and ruled, on the “borders of 
dictatorship” (Thomas Lindenberger). Historians pointed out that “On 
occasion, the ruling SED, in the interest of stability, was required to 
reach out to the population, whether in the form of allowing rock 
concerts for youth, more freedom to the cultural sphere for writers and 
artists, or allowing renegade church leaders to continue initiatives 
that were not in line with state policy.” (Gary Bruce, The Firm. The 
Inside Story of the Stasi, Oxford University Press, 2010.) The Soviet 
historiography had known a similar trend for even longer - for instance 
Sheila Fitzpatrick requalified life under Stalinism as “ordinary lives” 
already in 2000 (Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary 
Times, Oxford University Press, 2000.)
 Some people also asked 
what I meant by “social contract” between the regime and the population 
and decried my naïveté if I thought some sort of concrete round table 
ever took place. The social contract that I mentioned is a sociological 
notion. It does not literally mean that people and the regime sat down 
together. It refers to Václav Havel’s Letter to Dr Gustáv Husák (1975) 
and other essays. In Havel’s analysis, the regime exchanged the 
political passivity of the population with consumer goods and a 
relatively decent standard of living. It does not amount to denying that
 some people, indeed too many people, did suffer actual, personalised 
repression; it is only the starting point for a reflection on modern 
European society, on its ability to resist and temptation to consent. A 
reflection that concerns, again, all of us Europeans and not just 
Czechs. Similar analyses took place in other Central European countries 
that suffered under communism’s yoke, so much so that this period has 
been coined, in academic parlance, “goulash socialism.”
 So how 
are we to study totalitarianism? Totalitarianism is a concept so 
ideologically fraught that it tells more about the person who employs it
 than about the reality it is supposed to describe. That is why I favour
 the Havelian concept of “autotalita” (The Power of the Powerless, 1978)
 that emphasises the notion of individual responsibility. One of my 
professors, Pierre Hassner (who grew up in Romania), used to say: “I am 
totalitarianism” (Guy Hermet, Pierre Hassner, Jacques Rupnik, 
Totalitarismes, 1984.) By this he, like Havel, meant that 
totalitarianism was a protean concept, embodying a specific historical 
experience for each and everyone. 
 What about today, then? 
Hassner quotes James Joyce: “History is a nightmare from which I am 
trying to wake up.” But for some, he adds, it is the nightmare from 
which they are trying not to wake up.
 
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