Late Soviet Samizdat (Published)
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Recent tendencies in historiography have drawn our attention away from the top-down, state-level actors driving geopolitical currents to people's every day experience of life under Communism. This can take the form of studies of consumer culture, design, labor history, popular entertainment, or associational life as it was shaped by its participants. By the early 1960s, aesthetic and lifestyle choices that differed from the norm were already seen as a deliberate choice to be nonconformist, but after the events of 1968 these gestures were even further politicized and registered (in East and West) as dissent. In this module, we will look at a wide range of practices, from folk culture to street fashion to patterns of consumption and entertainment, to understand how every day life itself could be an act of resistance from a hegemonic political culture.