Chapter
Publicly Available
Acronyms
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acronyms viii
- Foreword ix
- Editors’ Note xiii
-
Part One: Sinnwelt And Eigen-Sinn
- 1. Socialism as Sinnwelt: Communist Dictatorship and its World of Meaning in a Cultural-Historical Perspective 1
- 2. Neither Consent nor Opposition: Eigen-Sinn, or How to Make Sense of Compliance and Self-Assertion under Communist Domination 19
-
Part Two: Authorities And Domination
- 3. Policeman Nicolae: The Story of One Man’s Life and Work in the Socialist Republic of Romania (1960–89) 31
- 4. The East German Reporting System: Normality and Legitimacy Through Bureaucracy 51
- 5. Late Communist Elites and the Demise of State Socialism in Czechoslovakia (1986–89) 61
-
Part Three: Everyday Social Practices And Sinnwelt
- 6. Local Self-Governance, Voluntary Practices, and the Sinnwelt of Socialist Velenje 81
- 7. Modern Housekeeping Worlds; or, How Much is Thirty Percent Really? Eigensinnige Consumer Practices and the Hungarian Trade Union’s “Washing Machine Campaign” of 1957–58 111
- 8. Single Mothers, Lonely Children: Polish Families, Socialist Modernity, and the Experience of Crisis of the Late 1970s and 1980s 129
- 9. “Since Makarenko the Time for Experiments has Passed”: Peace, Gender, and Human Rights in East Berlin during the 1980s 153
-
Part Four: Intellectual And Expert Worlds And (De-)Legitimization
- 10. Problems with Progress in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia: The Example of Most, North Bohemia 177
- 11. Authentic Community and Autonomous Individual: Making Sense of Socialism in Late Socialist Hungary 203
- 12. The “Will to Publicity” and its Publicists: Curating the Memory of Czechoslovak Samizdat 221
- 13. Dissident Legalism: Human Rights, Socialist Legality, and the Birth of Legal Resistance in the 1970s Democratic Opposition in Czechoslovakia and Poland 241
- Contributors 271
- Translators 272
- Index 273
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Table of Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acronyms viii
- Foreword ix
- Editors’ Note xiii
-
Part One: Sinnwelt And Eigen-Sinn
- 1. Socialism as Sinnwelt: Communist Dictatorship and its World of Meaning in a Cultural-Historical Perspective 1
- 2. Neither Consent nor Opposition: Eigen-Sinn, or How to Make Sense of Compliance and Self-Assertion under Communist Domination 19
-
Part Two: Authorities And Domination
- 3. Policeman Nicolae: The Story of One Man’s Life and Work in the Socialist Republic of Romania (1960–89) 31
- 4. The East German Reporting System: Normality and Legitimacy Through Bureaucracy 51
- 5. Late Communist Elites and the Demise of State Socialism in Czechoslovakia (1986–89) 61
-
Part Three: Everyday Social Practices And Sinnwelt
- 6. Local Self-Governance, Voluntary Practices, and the Sinnwelt of Socialist Velenje 81
- 7. Modern Housekeeping Worlds; or, How Much is Thirty Percent Really? Eigensinnige Consumer Practices and the Hungarian Trade Union’s “Washing Machine Campaign” of 1957–58 111
- 8. Single Mothers, Lonely Children: Polish Families, Socialist Modernity, and the Experience of Crisis of the Late 1970s and 1980s 129
- 9. “Since Makarenko the Time for Experiments has Passed”: Peace, Gender, and Human Rights in East Berlin during the 1980s 153
-
Part Four: Intellectual And Expert Worlds And (De-)Legitimization
- 10. Problems with Progress in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia: The Example of Most, North Bohemia 177
- 11. Authentic Community and Autonomous Individual: Making Sense of Socialism in Late Socialist Hungary 203
- 12. The “Will to Publicity” and its Publicists: Curating the Memory of Czechoslovak Samizdat 221
- 13. Dissident Legalism: Human Rights, Socialist Legality, and the Birth of Legal Resistance in the 1970s Democratic Opposition in Czechoslovakia and Poland 241
- Contributors 271
- Translators 272
- Index 273