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Acta Poloniae Historica T. 115 (2017)
Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences ; Polish National Historical Committee
The article presents the story of the underground Solidarity radio, a less known chapter of dissident media activism, whose emblematic form was the “extra-Gutenberg” phenomenon of underground print culture, or samizdat. It proposes an approach, influenced by media archeology, in which both can be studied as part and parcel of the same communication environment in order to better understand the particular articulation of dissent, media and modernity which both represented. It proposes that in addition to being a certain media form, samizdat was a “social media fantasy” – a shared cultural matrix which embodied political expectations and passions about liberating effects on horizontal communication, attainable here and now through means at disposal of an average person. Underground broadcasting developed in the shadow of the samizdat materialization of this emancipatory media fantasy, despite the fact that radio activists mastered a unique craft of intrusion into the public airwaves, which gave broadcasting an aura of spectacularity that underground publishing had lost as it expanded.
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oai:rcin.org.pl:63834 ; 0001-6829 ; 10.12775/APH.2017.115.07
IH PAN, sygn. A.295/115 Podr. ; IH PAN, sygn. A.296/115 ; click here to follow the link
Creative Commons Attribution BY-ND 4.0 license
Copyright-protected material. [CC BY-ND 4.0] May be used within the scope specified in Creative Commons Attribution BY-ND 4.0 license, full text available at: ; -
Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Library of the Institute of History PAS
Sep 22, 2023
Nov 29, 2017
352
https://rcin.org.pl./publication/83488
Byszewski, Piotr
Apanowicz, Franciszek
Apanowicz, Franciszek Wosik, Jakub Jaros, Maja