Samizdat and an independent society in Central and Eastern Europe
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Samizdat and an independent society in Central and Eastern Europe
(St. Antony's/Macmillan series)
Macmillan, in association with St Antony's College, Oxford, 1989
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Note
Includes bibliography (p.239-283) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study of the "independent life of society" (dissent) in Central and Eastern Europe examines the many forms of independent activity at work today. Included are autonomous family life, religion and nationalism, the second economy, "samizdat" communications, the second culture, including the alternative youth culture, parallel politics and social deviance. The author provides a comprehensive systematic analysis of independent historical and political writings in Czechoslovakia, Charter 77 and other forms of autonomous action in that country. He also makes a thorough survey of "samizdat" and other dissident activities in the USSR and the other countries of Central Europe, and assesses the validity of the concepts of an "independent" or "parallel" society which are widely used to interpret these phenomena. The author has published several books on Eastern Europe including "Czechoslovakia's Interrupted Revolution".
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Samizdat in the USSR, China and Eastern Europe: Samizdat - a return to the pre-Gutenberg era?
- independent communications in Eastern Europe. Part 2 Independent tendencies in Czechoslovakia: dissent and Charter 77
- other independent currents
- the muse of history - independent historiography reborn
- parallel politics. Part 3 The independent life of society in Eastern Europe: a second society
- a parallel polity and society
- towards an independent society?.
by "Nielsen BookData"