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Cultural dissent in Soviet Belarus (1968-1988)

Intelligentsia, Samizdat and Nonconformist Discourses

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Soviet Belarus has often been seen as the most loyal Soviet republic, marked by a lack of protest and nonconformism. This perception persisted even after the collapse of Socialism and the emergence of an independent Belarus, where democratic aspirations faced new authoritarian challenges. The focus of this work is on the dissenting ideas that circulated among the Belarusian Soviet Intelligentsia, both in samizdat (uncensored) and officially published literature. It posits that the latter played a crucial role in conveying unconventional cultural and identity narratives. These ideas laid the groundwork for a vibrant cultural and political life in the late 1980s and early 1990s, despite being overshadowed by subsequent decline. The study spans from 1968, marked by the Prague Spring and its suppression, which shifted intellectuals' self-perception and views on the Socialist order, to 1988, when dissent transformed into political protest ahead of the Autumn of Nations in Eastern and Central Europe. Key questions include the conditions that fostered nonconformism in a conformist society, the functioning of samizdat publishing, the exchange of ideas, and how the Belarusian intelligentsia navigated writing and thinking under the Socialist regime. These inquiries are central to the narrative.

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Cultural dissent in Soviet Belarus (1968-1988), Tatsiana Astrouskaya

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2019
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