alternatiivsed eluviisid ja vastupanu igapäevaelus alternatiivsed hariduse vormid
autoritaarsete / totalitaarsete režiimide tagakiusamise all kannatanud
avangard, neo-avangard
demokraatlik opositsioon
emigratsioon/eksiil
etnilised liikumised
film filosoofilised/teoreetilised liikumised järelevalve
kaunid kunstid keskkonnakaitse
kirjandus ja kirjanduskriitika kriitiline teadus
liikumine inimõiguste eest meediakunst muusika
naiste liikumine
noorte kultuur partei dissidendid
popkultuur
rahuliikumised rahvakultuur rahvuslikud liikumised
samizdat ja tamizdat
sõltumatu ajakirjandus
südametunnistest lähtuvalt
teaduslik kriitika
teatri- ja etenduskunst
tsensuur underground kultuur
usuline aktiivsus
visuaalkunst
vähemusliikumised ühiskondlikud liikumised
üliõpilasliikumine
The Herta Müller Ad-hoc Collection at CNSAS focuses on the case of the Romanian-born German writer Herta Müller and the way in which the Romanian secret police, the Securitate, monitored the development of her cultural opposition towards the communist regime. The documents of the collection show that Herta Müller came to the unwanted attention of the Securitate as her writings shed a negative light on “socialist reality” and they intensified their informative surveillance of her as her prose reached a larger and more international audience.
This digital archive presents visual and textual materials relating to the creative practices and material culture of the religious underground located within the archives of the secret police in Central and Eastern Europe. These unique materials offer an insight into the religious lives of ordinary members of minority communities under repressive regimes in twentieth century Hungary, Romania, Moldova and Ukraine. The archive is designed to enable researchers to find difficult to locate files that contain materials confiscated from religious groups as well as representations of these religious groups created by the secret police.
The main aim of the Historical collection is to collect and organize primary and secondary sources concerning the history of the Hungarians living in Romania, particularly during the political transition from communism to a multiparty system.