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This book tells the story of the dissident imaginary of samizdat
activists, the political culture they created, and the pivotal role
that culture had in sustaining the resilience of the oppositional
movement in Poland between 1976 and 1990. This unlicensed print
culture has been seen as one of the most emblematic social worlds
of dissent. Since the Cold War, the audacity of harnessing obsolete
print technology known as samizdat to break the modern monopoly of
information of the party-state has fascinated many, yet this book
looks beyond the Cold War frame to reappraise its historical
novelty and significance. What made that culture resilient and
rewarding, this book argues, was the correspondence between certain
set of ideas and media practices: namely, the form of samizdat
social media, which both embodied and projected the prefigurative
philosophy of political action, asserting that small forms of
collective agency can have a transformative effect on public life
here and now, and are uniquely capable of achieving a democratic
new beginning. This prefigurative vision of the transition from
communism had a fundamental impact on the broader oppositional
movement. Yet, while both the rise of Solidarity and the
breakthrough of 1989 seemed to do justice to that vision, both
pivotal moments found samizdat social media activists making
history that was not to their liking. Back in the day, their
estrangement was overshadowed by the main axis of contention
between the society and the state. Foregrounding the internal
controversies they protagonized, this book adds nuance to our
understanding of the broader legacy of dissent and its relevance
for the networked protests of today.
This book tells the story of the dissident imaginary of samizdat
activists, the political culture they created, and the pivotal role
that culture had in sustaining the resilience of the oppositional
movement in Poland between 1976 and 1990. This unlicensed print
culture has been seen as one of the most emblematic social worlds
of dissent. Since the Cold War, the audacity of harnessing obsolete
print technology known as samizdat to break the modern monopoly of
information of the party-state has fascinated many, yet this book
looks beyond the Cold War frame to reappraise its historical
novelty and significance. What made that culture resilient and
rewarding, this book argues, was the correspondence between certain
set of ideas and media practices: namely, the form of samizdat
social media, which both embodied and projected the prefigurative
philosophy of political action, asserting that small forms of
collective agency can have a transformative effect on public life
here and now, and are uniquely capable of achieving a democratic
new beginning. This prefigurative vision of the transition from
communism had a fundamental impact on the broader oppositional
movement. Yet, while both the rise of Solidarity and the
breakthrough of 1989 seemed to do justice to that vision, both
pivotal moments found samizdat social media activists making
history that was not to their liking. Back in the day, their
estrangement was overshadowed by the main axis of contention
between the society and the state. Foregrounding the internal
controversies they protagonized, this book adds nuance to our
understanding of the broader legacy of dissent and its relevance
for the networked protests of today.
"It is not easy for historians to apply their methods to a period
that does not yet have a clear end" is the first sentence in this
book, revealing the challenge that a new generation of scholars
took at writing an intellectual history of post-communist East
Central Europe. Post-communism can be understood both as a period
of scarcity and preponderance of ideas. It is the dramatic
eclipsing of the dissident legacy-as well as the older political
traditions-and the rise of technocratic and post-political
governance. Eighteen essays by authors from the region discuss how
major domains of political thought (liberalism, conservatism, the
Left, populism and memory politics) have been fairing in their
countries. The studies, grounded in empirical research sensitive to
local contexts, detail a history of adaptations, entanglements, and
unintended consequences.
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