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  1. Samizdat - Wikipedia

    Though a diversity of religious samizdat circulated, including three Buddhist texts, no known Islamic samizdat texts exist. The lack of Islamic samizdat appears incongruous with the large …

  2. SAMIZDAT Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of SAMIZDAT is a system in the Soviet Union and countries within its orbit by which government-suppressed literature was clandestinely printed and distributed; also : such literature.

  3. About Samizdat | Project for the Study of Dissidence and Samizdat

    Samizdat was a system of uncensored textual production and circulation that developed in the Soviet Union after Stalin’s death, and which spread in the 1970s to other Communist bloc …

  4. Samizdat | Dissident Press, Underground Publishing & Soviet …

    Dec 22, 2025 · Samizdat, (from Russian sam, “self,” and izdatelstvo, “publishing”), literature secretly written, copied, and circulated in the former Soviet Union and usually critical of …

  5. Samizdat - New World Encyclopedia

    Samizdat demonstrates the human committment both to freedom and to truth, in the face of repressive regimes. The peoples under Soviet domination rejected the official version of reality …

  6. Samizdat - Political Dictionary

    In the Soviet era, dissidents often relied on samizdat, a system of clandestine copying and distribution, to disseminate banned literature and ideas. Through samizdat, forbidden texts …

  7. What is Samizdat? - refuseniksactivists.org

    Jewish samizdat was transitioning from a spontaneous literature of self-discovery into the official print culture of a national subgroup. Despite their divergences, powerful threads of continuity …

  8. Samizdat - Wikiwand

    Samizdat was a form of dissident activity across the Eastern Bloc in which individuals reproduced censored and underground makeshift publications, often by hand...

  9. Samizdat Definition - European History – 1945 to Present Key …

    Samizdat refers to the clandestine copying and distribution of literature and political writings in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, particularly during the Cold War.

  10. With time, Soviet dissidents, too, began to value, or fetishize, the samizdat text, a phenomenon later profiled by younger generations of samizdat users, who directed critical attention toward …