Any dissenter becomes an enemy (Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)

Forty years ago, if there was one novel you could count on educated readers having read and loved, it was The Book of Laughter and Forgetting by Milan Kundera. First published in an English translation in America in 1980, it took the temperature of the age as no other book did.
It was the great novel of the end of European Communism: a novel of ideas and eroticism, the surreal and the naturalistic. In tone intimate and ironic, it seemed to take its readers into its confidence, assuming a high level of curiosity and scepticism, large-mindedness and mirth, but also anxiety, lest waking from one nightmare was no guarantee that we wouldnāt fall headlong into the next.
We didnāt read it as we read polemic ā the characters were too vivid to allow us to forget we were reading fiction ā but it was conjecturally high-risk in a way that other novels werenāt. Laughter and Forgetting: the very concatenation of those words promised an original ride. So we hung on, rubbing our eyes as though waking from a long sleep, curious to read whatever Kundera had written earlier and impatient to read whatever he would write next. Today, the laughter has fallen silent and, except among a few aficionados and readers without an axe to grind, Kundera himself is all but forgotten.
The forgetting of Kunderaās title is the state-sponsored forgetting essential to totalitarianism, allowing that totalitarianism insinuates its way into the most private corners of our lives. The novelās opening reads like a fairy tale told by a historian. āIn February 1948, the Communist leader Klement Gottwald stepped out on the balcony of a Baroque palace…ā Next to Gottwald on the balcony is the Foreign Minister, Vladimir Clementis. It is cold and, noting that Gottwald is bareheaded, Clementis takes the fur hat off his head and puts it on his leaderās. Four years later Clementis is hanged for treason and āimmediately airbrushed out of historyā, which means being airbrushed out of this and all other photographs as well. Inspect the photograph today and the only evidence that Clementis was ever on that balcony is the fur hat on Gottwaldās head. So tellingly comic is the image that one wants to push it further into surrealism and remove Gottwald too, leaving only the hat to hover Magritte-like in the snow.
We have our own vocabulary to describe what the Czech Communist party did to Clementis 70 years ago. We say it ācancelledā him. It is, I think, instructive to trace cancel cultureās political origins in the mindset of totalitarianism.
The cruel irony is that Kunderaās novel has itself become the object of the very cancelling it describes. Little by little, whether by malevolent design (which is hard to prove) or by subtle changes in the literary/political zeitgeist (also hard to chart) Kundera and his novels fell out of favour.
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