Article contents
Lustration and Truth Claims: Unfinished Revolutions in Central Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 December 2018
Abstract
This article focuses on discourses conducted in Central/East European countries, and Poland in particular, with respect to the issue of participation of former secret agents in the new power structures. It exposes the reader to the range, style, content, and variety of lustration discourses. It explores their relevance for the ongoing power struggle, paying special attention to their focus on and contribution to the processes of construction and control of truth about the past.
Given that the procedural and legal-institutional issues occupy a marginal place in the debate, it is inferred that the main sources of discord are more ideological and political than legal. The two main strains within the global lustration discourse are identified as: (1) dystopian discourses that paint a frightful picture of a lustrated society and imply that the upheaval of lustration would ruin the chance for democratic evolution, and (2) affirmative discourses that assert the need for lustration and portray the refusal to implement it as a barrier to successful transition to democracy. The article elaborates on assumptions and beliefs, which tend to link the dystopian opposition to lustration with the left-wing political affiliation or self-identification and the affirmative discourse with the right-wing orientation.
- Type
- Symposium: Law and Lustration: Righting the Wrongs of the Past
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1995
References
1 Lustration involves barring former (communist) secret police agents and collaborators from public office for a certain period of time.Google Scholar
2 This text is based on my analysis of the Polish Senate debates, political speeches, press articles, and other publications for the periods of the greatest interest in the lustration issue. I also drew on materials from other Central European countries that through their publication in Poland became embroiled in the Polish public discourse. I have also acquired some insight into those countries' lustration discourses by reading English-language translations of selected speeches and articles.Google Scholar
3 See Michel Foucault, “Politics and the Study of Discourse”in G. Burchell, C. Gordon, & P. Miller, eds., The Foucault Effect 53–72 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991) (“Foucault, 'Politics'”).Google Scholar
4 Indeed, both in the public discourse studied and in private conversations during my visits to Poland, 1 was impressed by the intensity, akin to the “political correctness” in the West, with which questioning the past of individuals was subject to social censure and considered unworthy.Google Scholar
5 The length of this list varies considerably from one proposal to another.Google Scholar
6 In this text, “Czecho-Slovakia” (a shortening of the names for the Czech and Slovak Federal Republics) refers to that territory during the period between the June 1990 free elections and the January 1993 separation of the Czech and Slovak Republics.Google Scholar
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