Looking Back Ahead
Samizdat, Internet and Freedom of Expression
Osteuropa 11/2010
Manfred Sapper, Volker Weichsel, Wolfgang Eichwede (Ed.)
Berlin (BWV) 2010 [= Osteuropa 11/2010]
272 pages, 34 figures
Price: 20,00 €
ISBN: 978-3-8305-1711-5
Deutsche Fassung
Contents
- Editorial
Think Different - Barbara J. Falk
Dissent and Political Theory
Lessons from East Central Europe - Dmitrij Golynko
Social Networks in Russia
Negative Community in a Unnetworked Society - Ann Komaromi
Beyond Gutenberg
The Dynamic of the Dissident Public - Wolfgang Eichwede
“Detente with a Human Face”
The CSCE, Human Rights, and Samizdat - Henrike Schmidt
Creative Self-articulation and Prohibition
RuNet and the Samizdat Tradition - Peter Reddaway
Repression and Liberalisation
Soviet Power and Dissidents, 1953–1986 - Leonid Luks
Idea and Identity
Lines of Tradition in Soviet Dissent - Natal’ja Konradova, Michail Kalužskij
Russia’s Public (Blogo)sphere
Blogging as Social Practice, Consequences for the Net - Wolfgang Stephan Kissel
Anti-Canon and Cultural Memory
Samizdat and the Erosion of Socialist Realism - Malte Rolf
Canon and Anti-Canon
Official Culture and Its Inversion in the Soviet Union - Béla Nóvé
Breaking Out of the Velvet Prison
Censorship and Freedom of the Press in Hungary in the 1980s - Dorothea Wolf
Freedom and Control
The Internet in Belarus and the Idea of Samizdat - Rüdiger Ritter
The Illusion of Control and Art
Power, the Ganelin Trio, and Jazz - Heidrun Hamersky
Dissident Movement on Film
The Photographic Work of Ivan Kyncl - Jakob Fruchtmann
Storing the Evasive
An Archive of Alternative Thinking in RuNet