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samizdat |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
samizdatSystem whereby literature suppressed by the Soviet government was clandestinely written, printed, and distributed; also, the literature itself. Samizdat began appearing in the 1950s, first in Moscow and Leningrad, then throughout the Soviet Union. It typically took the form of carbon copies of typewritten sheets that were passed from reader to reader. The subjects included dissident activities, protests addressed to the regime, transcripts of political trials, analyses of socioeconomic and cultural themes, and even pornography. Samizdat disappeared when media outlets independent of the government emerged in the early 1990s.
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They have invited him because Roger Scruton is that most unlikely of British intellectuals, a conservative, the founding editor of the Salisbury Review, which alone among English periodicals is being retyped, ten carbons at a time, and distributed in a samizdat edition in Prague. In the spring of 1979 Xu Wenli, the Democracy Wall activist and editor of the samizdat April Fifth Forum (Siwu Luntan), told me that the protest movement aimed to hold the Chinese authorities to the Constitution and to the officially propagated moral principles of the Chinese state and the CCP. And, so, I practice a variant of samizdat pedagogy. |
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