This section contains 1,124 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: "Philosopher President," in Commonweal, October 24, 1997, pp. 23-4.
In the following review, Elshtain offers a positive evaluation of The Art of the Impossible.
President Václav Havel of the Czech Republic is one of the great spokesmen for the "return to Europe" of countries formerly compelled to inhabit that political nowhereland called "Eastern Europe." He is an urbane intellectual, a playwright, and a moralist. That he is also the president of a nation-state is for him one of life's great ironies, even miracles, and he claims that he can scarcely believe it most of the time: one day an infamous dissident slated for harassment and incarceration; the next a famous dissident addressing hundreds of thousands gathered in Wenceslaus Square in defiance of a corrupt, authoritarian regime; and then a bit further on, the president of (then) Czechoslovakia proclaiming, on January 1, 1990: "People, your government has returned to you!"
It...
This section contains 1,124 words (approx. 4 pages at 300 words per page) |