Samizdat, the underground circulation of unofficial and forbidden literature in the Soviet Union, is an example of how censorship can backfire. Ideological restrictions produced walls of monotony in libraries and bookstores, propelling readers to search for more interesting fare. Sensitive texts on religion, philosophy, human rights, and current events, as well as literary works, passed from hand to hand clandestinely from around 1960 until censorship was abolished in the late 1980s. Von Zitzewitz's study is itself interesting fare, uncovering the workings of samizdat as both a distribution network, comparable to that of print culture, and a social network that developed bonds between people who shared a defined purpose outside the public space. By no means did they all think of themselves as dissenters. For many people who lived ordinary Soviet lives, it was simply that “reading samizdat increased [their] individual feeling of freedom and represented a personal act of resistance.”...
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Book Review|
May 01 2023
The Culture of Samizdat: Literature and Underground Networks in the Late Soviet Union
Josephine von Zitzewitz,
The Culture of Samizdat: Literature and Underground Networks in the Late Soviet Union
(London
: Bloomsbury Academic
, 2021
), 248
pp.
Carol Any
Carol Any, professor of language and culture studies at Trinity College, Connecticut, is the author of The Soviet Writers’ Union and Its Leaders: Identity and Authority Under Stalin; and Boris Eikhenbaum: Voices of a Russian Formalist.
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Common Knowledge (2023) 29 (2): 242–244.
Citation
Carol Any; The Culture of Samizdat: Literature and Underground Networks in the Late Soviet Union. Common Knowledge 1 May 2023; 29 (2): 242–244. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/0961754X-10568820
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