To the Castle and Back
Havel's 2006 presidential memoir — retrospective on Czech-presidency 1989-2003
Tradition: Czech dissident-presidential memoir
Havel's 2006 presidential memoir
To the Castle and Back (Prosím stručně — literally 'Please, Briefly,' 2006) is Václav Havel's (1936-2011) substantial late memoir-retrospective on his presidency — first of post-Velvet-Revolution Czechoslovakia (December 1989 until the Czech-Slovak dissolution of December 31, 1992) and then of the new Czech Republic (1993-2003). The book has an unusual three-strand interleaved structure: (1) Havel's contemporaneous 2005-06 journal entries from his sabbatical-and-recuperation period in Washington DC (where he was a fellow at the Library of Congress) and Portugal, written in a relaxed-conversational register; (2) archived presidential documents — memos, instructions to staff, working letters — chronologically arranged across his fourteen presidential years, showing the daily texture of his presidential work; (3) answers to interview-questions posed by his long-time interlocutor Karel Hvížďala, the journalist who had also conducted the famous Disturbing the Peace (1986) interview-book during Havel's pre-1989 dissident period. The three strands together generate an unusually rich self-portrait: the journal strand catches Havel's domestic-personal voice (the cottage in Portugal, friendships, ageing, the marriage with Dagmar Havlová), the documents strand catches the institutional-political-historical reality of post-Communist Czech and Czechoslovak presidency, and the interview strand catches Havel's reflective-philosophical voice on his presidential decisions, the personal-political cost of his years in office, and his evolving understanding of democracy, civic responsibility, and his own role. The book is the principal late-Havel reflection on the post-Communist transition, on the moral-political ambiguities of presidential power, on the relation between dissident-moral commitment and institutional-political responsibility, and on the larger question of what it means for an intellectual to govern. Together with Letters to Olga (1983, the prison-letters), Disturbing the Peace (1986, the dissident-period interview), and the political-essay corpus (Power of the Powerless 1978, Politics and Conscience 1984, Summer Meditations 1991), it forms the essential autobiographical-political-philosophical Havel corpus.
Author
Editions cited
- Prosím stručně (Gallery, Prague, 2006)
- English: To the Castle and Back, trans. Paul Wilson (Knopf / Portobello, 2007)
- Translations into German, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Polish, Russian, Hungarian
School Embodiments
Defining post-Cold-War political memoir.
"Post-Cold-War political memoir." (To the Castle and Back)
Late-Havel dissident-presidential retrospective.
"Late-Havel dissident-presidential retrospective." (To the Castle and Back)
Major practical-political-philosophical memoir.
"Practical political-philosophical memoir." (To the Castle and Back)
Late-Havel political-ethical retrospective.
"Political-ethical retrospective." (To the Castle and Back)
Major historical-presidential record.
"Czech-presidential historical record." (To the Castle and Back)
Major civil-society-philosophical reflection.
"Civil-society-philosophical reflection." (To the Castle and Back)
Internal Tensions
To the Castle and Back is the defining late-Havel political memoir and the principal source for understanding his presidential years from his own perspective. The book has been variously assessed — by sympathetic readers as a thoughtful late summing-up of a remarkable moral-political career, by more critical readers (notably some Czech and Slovak commentators) as inadequately reckoning with specific presidential decisions (NATO expansion, the Czechoslovak dissolution, particular appointments).
I. Time
Contemporaneous strand 2005-06; documents 1989-2003 (the full presidency); book publication 2006 (three years after presidency, five years before his death in 2011).
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II. Space
Composed in Portugal, Prague, and Washington DC; subsequent transnational readership of Havel's late-life political-memoirist voice.
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III. Matter
The Czechoslovak and Czech presidency 1989-2003, the Velvet Revolution aftermath, the Czechoslovak dissolution, the post-Communist transition, Havel's evolving political-philosophical thinking, the personal cost of fourteen years in office.
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IV. Observer
Late Havel — post-presidency, post-cancer-recovery, in semi-retirement; reflecting on the institutional-political work of the previous fifteen years.
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V. Energy
Reflective-memoirist, institutionally-documentary, personally-confessional, philosophically-summary energies.
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VI. Information
Three-strand interleaved structure: contemporaneous journal entries, archival presidential documents, Hvížďala interview-questions and Havel answers; combines memoir, archive, and dialogue forms.
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Personas that cite this work
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How To the Castle and Back resolves each dilemma
45 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 33 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 12 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.
23 mainstream positions
9 unaligned
Information · 4 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
Pattern, memory, and what is preserved or lost.