The Magic Lantern Analysis

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In the fall of 1989, people all around the world were watching unbelievable scenes on their televisions. Thousands of people in eastern Europe were meeting in the streets and squares and demanding the end of the communist rule. For the first time in history, opposition to communism was publically voiced. Barbed wire border fences in Hungary were being torn down. East Germans were fleeing to the West. Overnight the Berlin wall collapsed. The start of these historical events was the Polish Revolution of 1989. In the novel “The Magic Lantern”, author Timothy Garton Ash tells of political movements that were seen all over eastern Europe. He writes of the protests at East Germany’s Tiananmen Square, where riot police, army units and factory ‘combat groups’ stood ready to defend socialism with weapons if need be. And in Czechoslovakia, where students organized discussion groups and met in the ‘Magic Lantern Theater’. He witnessed demonstrators who “marched to Wenceslas Square where they were met by riot police and special anti-terrorist squads.” (84) Thousands of people roamed the square waving flags and chanting slogans. Posters were seen all over the cities and debates were held in theaters. As explained in “Revolutions of 1989”, These “campaigns of civil resistance demonstrat[ed] popular opposition to the continuation of one-party rule and contribut[ed] to the pressure for change.” (Wikipedia) In addition to these street demonstrations, there were massive waves of workers’ strikes in the mines and steel mills. At first, the government tried to threaten the protesters; the Committee of National Defense announced preparations for a national state of emergency. By the determination of the workers the Communist reali... ... middle of paper ... ...astern European country held competitive parliamentary elections for the first time in many decades. The collapse of communism marked the end of the Cold War. Theodora Dragostinova wrote that the revolutions of 1989 had a “colossal impact of global significance because they ended the Cold War” and “brought the demise of communist dictatorships” in eastern Europe forever. (1989 Twenty Years On: The End of Communism and the Fate of Eastern Europe) Many changes have been made to the Eastern European countries in the years following the revolutions but one thing hasn’t changed. Communism hasn’t returned. Democracy has been maintained. In Timothy Garton Ash’s novel, “The Magic Lantern”, the author shows his sense of pride in his country. The people of these countries brought about this change by themselves, for themselves and they did it peacefully.

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