Samizdat (Russian: самиздат, pronounced [səmɨzˈdat], lit. 'self-publishing') was a form of dissident activity across the Eastern Bloc in which individuals...
40 KB (4,226 words) - 03:51, 15 April 2025
Samizdat is the clandestine copying and distribution of government-suppressed literature or other media in Soviet-bloc countries. Samizdat may also refer...
1,000 bytes (150 words) - 02:03, 3 December 2021
Generation Warriors (redirect from Samizdat (Generation Warriors))
Generation Warriors is a science fiction novel by American writers Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon. published by Baen Books in 1991. It concludes the...
2 KB (154 words) - 05:33, 29 March 2025
Eastern Bloc media and propaganda (redirect from Eastern Bloc samizdat)
Circumvention of dissemination controls occurred to some degree through samizdat and limited reception of western radio and television broadcasts. In addition...
73 KB (5,515 words) - 18:50, 22 April 2025
Samizdat: And Other Issues Regarding the 'Source' of Open Source Code is a 2004 report by Kenneth Brown. The report suggests that the Linux kernel may...
13 KB (1,460 words) - 20:16, 5 November 2024
Interesting Times (redirect from Samizdat (Interesting Times))
Interesting Times is a fantasy novel by British writer Terry Pratchett. It is the seventeenth book in the Discworld series and is set in the Aurient (a...
10 KB (1,193 words) - 00:15, 5 April 2025
Samizdat was an international poetry magazine published in Chicago from 1998 until 2004 and edited by the poet Robert Archambeau. It was noted for its...
2 KB (171 words) - 17:42, 15 March 2025
This was a prelude to the pending publication of a book by Brown titled Samizdat: And Other Issues Regarding the 'Source' of Open Source Code. The book...
21 KB (2,410 words) - 21:24, 20 March 2025
than with building socialism. Underground dissident literature, known as samizdat, developed during this late period. In architecture, the Khrushchev era...
223 KB (22,532 words) - 12:48, 23 April 2025
education for the Jack Miller Center. In 2024 Real Clear Politics awarded the Samizdat Prize for 1st Amendment Courage to Miranda Devine, Jay Bhattacharya and...
27 KB (2,571 words) - 19:05, 3 March 2025
in Philology in 1959. He wrote poetry in Soviet Russia as part of the Samizdat movement, creating poems that were both visually and audibly artistic....
11 KB (1,218 words) - 05:10, 21 August 2024
B92 (redirect from Samizdat B92)
B92 media network are B92.net web portal, B92 Fond humanitarian fund, Samizdat B92 book publisher and Rex cultural center. The most prominent person in...
28 KB (3,235 words) - 05:39, 26 February 2025
dissident. For his political activities, such as founding and editing samizdat almanac Phoenix, he was incarcerated in prisons, camps and forced treatment...
8 KB (773 words) - 05:13, 18 April 2025
Russia itself, where his works were secretly reproduced and distributed by samizdat during the Communist era, remaining popular today. Rose's opposition to...
26 KB (2,902 words) - 16:28, 11 April 2025
Miranda Devine (section Samizdat Prize (2024))
2024. Retrieved 11 September 2024. Zito, Salena (27 February 2024). "New Samizdat Prize makes good journalism Real Clear". The Washington Examiner. Archived...
34 KB (2,860 words) - 06:53, 31 March 2025
series to a book that was published in August 2019 via his own publisher Samizdat Publishing. The cover of the book was designed by Tomas Arfert. During...
10 KB (849 words) - 11:32, 6 March 2025
Ginzburg, Alexey Dobrovolsky and Vera Lahkova for their involvement in samizdat publications. The trial took place in Moscow City Court on January 8–12...
21 KB (2,209 words) - 02:34, 26 July 2024
Samizdat copies of Nabokov's works on display at Nabokov House in Saint Petersburg....
11 KB (1,115 words) - 01:59, 27 January 2025
section where one can publish his own literary texts ("Samizdat" journal, named after the samizdat of the Soviet era), a project for music publishing ("Music...
4 KB (451 words) - 09:24, 27 October 2024
theorist. He is the author of numerous philosophical works that circulated in samizdat and made an impact on the liberal intelligentsia in the 1960s and 1970s...
17 KB (1,668 words) - 04:52, 24 October 2024
Petr Mikeš (section Samizdat poetry collections)
poet, translator, and editor. In the 1970s and 1980s he took part in the samizdat edition Texty přátel (Texts of Friends). From 1993–1997 he was the influential...
12 KB (1,621 words) - 09:51, 13 July 2024
KOI8-R encoding (in Russian) Samizdat books and artist' books by Serge Segay, some with zaum and visual poetry Samizdat books and artist' books by Ry...
10 KB (888 words) - 11:42, 20 December 2024
were not commercially available in the Soviet Union. It is analogous to samizdat, the method of disseminating written works that could not be officially...
10 KB (975 words) - 17:37, 23 October 2024
Bloc, bibuła published until the collapse of communism was known also as samizdat (see below). In the 19th century in partitioned Poland, many underground...
8 KB (944 words) - 19:52, 24 March 2025
Minix (section Samizdat claims)
Linux kernel had been copied from the MINIX codebase, in a book named Samizdat. These accusations were rebutted universally—most prominently by Tanenbaum...
25 KB (2,229 words) - 11:57, 14 March 2025
Venedikt Yerofeyev. Written between 1969 and 1970 and passed around in samizdat, it was first published in 1973 in Israel and later, in 1977, in Paris...
11 KB (1,106 words) - 19:59, 9 July 2024
the first place. Library Genesis has roots in the illegal underground samizdat culture in the Soviet Union. As access to printing in the Soviet Union...
30 KB (2,473 words) - 04:00, 30 March 2025
distributing banned literature or samizdat. Nearly a decade later, in 1984, Mironov was arrested for distributing samizdat and for his contacts with foreigners...
17 KB (1,826 words) - 12:19, 3 November 2024
introduced to the samizdat of Vasyl Symonenko in 1965, while studying at philology at Kyiv State University. He helped to propagate samizdat as a student and...
11 KB (1,048 words) - 03:57, 29 January 2025
mathematician, Soviet dissident, philosopher, Samizdat translator and writer. He used various pseudonyms for Samizdat, like N. A. Klenov, A.B. Nazyvayev, D.A...
12 KB (1,653 words) - 08:25, 31 October 2024