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Pre-State Israel.  The evolution of Jewish political and institutional system in Yishuv. From Community to State: 1897-1949

Pre-State Israel. The evolution of Jewish political and institutional system in Yishuv. From Community to State: 1897-1949

Author(s): Gabriela Andreana Dumitrescu / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2019

The emergence of World Zionist Organization at the end of 19th century and the increasing sympathy of world Jewry for political Zionism have strengthened the sense of the need to obtain a Jewish national home in Palestine. In a positive way, the end of the First World War and the decision of the League of Nations to place Palestine under British mandate favored regional development, especially of the Jewish community living there. Under the foreign administration, the Jewish people borrowed the proper aspects of the British model of parliamentary democracy and adapted them to the needs of the Yishuv, at a time when Jewish ideal enjoyed support and admiration, due in particular to Zionist diplomacy in Western Europe and the United States. Trying to maintain a good relationship with the British administration in order to fulfill its interests, the Jewish community in Palestine has thrived in various areas such as: political-institutional organization, economy, defence and demography, rapidly reaching a high level of development. These factors contributed tremendously to the birth of a modern democratic Jewish state. The reality of the simultaneous operation in Palestine of the three sets of institutions, those of the Yishuv, those of the Zionist Organization and those of the British administration represented a unique and remarkable fact. After Israel gained independence, the attempt to provide continuity to pre-state institutions represented a reality that was reflected in the flawless formula of the permanent institutions, in order to meet the needs of the new state in a situation of internal and international crisis.

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Legitymizacja autorytetu emigracji vs. autoryzacja legitymacji

Legitymizacja autorytetu emigracji vs. autoryzacja legitymacji

Author(s): Arkadiusz Adamczyk / Language(s): Polish Issue: 44/2022

RESERACH OBJECTIVE: The aim of the article is to present the conditions and course of presidential crises from the point of view of authorizing legalism and legalizing political leadership. An additional goal is to determine the scale of the impact that the so called The “Paris Agreement” of 1939. THE RESEARCH PROBLEM AND METHODS: The author also intends to confirm or question the hypothesis according to which in the authoritarian system of power it was not possible to legitimize the actual political authority and take this authority to the highest office in the state without authorization of political decisions on the part of the person actually exercising control over this office. THE PROCESS OF ARGUMENTATION: In political science, the issue of the functioning of the authorities of the Republic of Poland after the German and Soviet aggression in September 1939 remains almost absent. The reasoning is based on the description of the ability to maintain the legal continuity of the government and the president after leaving the country. RESERACH RESULTS: It has been proven that the political activities under taken in 1939–1954, as well as the political behavior of the main actors, directly influenced the consolidation of the authoritarian order. Paradoxically, the more efforts were made to legitimize and sanction the position of people enjoying universal authority, the more it led to an authoritative interpretation of the legal foundations on which refugee legalism was based. CONCLUSIONS, INNOVATIONS, AND RECOMENDATIONS: On this occasion, a research postulate should be formulated to investigate the impact of the dispute over the legitimacy of authority on the political capacity of the independence refugees. The implementation of this research postulate goes beyond the scope of this article.

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Collecting Personal Material  of the Hungarian Holocaust. Frameworks, Practices and Institutionalisation. A Historical Overview

Collecting Personal Material of the Hungarian Holocaust. Frameworks, Practices and Institutionalisation. A Historical Overview

Author(s): András Szécsényi,Heléna Huhák / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2023

The ambivalent attitude of socialist memory politics towards the Holocaust during János Kádár’s regime (1956–1989) is reflected in the history of personal collections. Although museums did collect Holocaust memorabilia, this was not encouraged or publicised. Because of such delayed and restrained collection, the objects relating to persecution are mostly to be found in family homes. Since the end of socialism did not change this attitude, the contemporary memorial landscape of the Holocaust covers not only the institutions dedicated to the history of persecution but also the (second- and third-generation) survivors’ homes. On the other hand, the public collection of the victims’ documents – albeit in an incomplete, unprofessional, and politically motivated manner – had already been established during the Kádár era, and within the framework of a non-Jewish, party organisation. In this paper, we will attempt to describe the activity of the Committee for Persons Persecuted by the Nazis (Ná-cizmus Üldözötteinek Bizottsága, NÜB), the first organisation to specifically collect Holocaust memorabilia. Through examples, we will show the extent to which privately owned personal material traces contributed to the building of public collections in the post-communist period. The study particularly focusses on the collecting strategies and practices of the post-1990 Hungarian Auschwitz Foundation (Magyar Auschwitz Alapítvány) and the state-run Holocaust Memorial Center (Holokauszt Emlékközpont, HE), thus completing the institutionalisation process of Holocaust-related materials. We argue that the post-war era’s memory politics and memory processes, mainly in the 1960s and 1980s, influenced both the biography of the objects and the histories of the world around them. Therefore, through the stories of the objects, we can better understand the relationship between institutional and personal memory. We seek to answer the question of what happened to the tangible heritage of the Holocaust during the Kádár era and how the survivors related to their preserved objects in the 2010s.

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Ловчанският митрополит Филарет като управляващ Охридско-Битолската епархия на Българската православна църква (1941 – 1944 г.)
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Ловчанският митрополит Филарет като управляващ Охридско-Битолската епархия на Българската православна църква (1941 – 1944 г.)

Author(s): Goran Blagoev / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 1/2023

Metropolitan Philaret of Loveč was among the synodal bishops entrusted with the administration of the dioceses rejoined to the Bulgarian Church in April 1941. The Metropolitan was appointed to rule the Ohrid-Bitola Diocese. By accepting his new appointment, he distinguished himself behaving with tact and moderation, showed understanding and sensitivity for the local Bulgarians’ pains and aspirations. At the beginning of September 1944, together with the state administration and military units, Bulgarian ecclesiastical authorities were forced to withdraw from the newly liberated lands. Before leaving his position, Philaret of Loveč manifested responsibility and took care of church matters that his diocese in charge did not fall into chaos due to the looming lawlessness.

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Kaplica grobowa Donimirskich w Czerninie

Kaplica grobowa Donimirskich w Czerninie

Author(s): Piotr Kanarek / Language(s): Polish Issue: 24/2023

This article is devoted to the burial chapel of the Donimirski family in Czernin (ger. Hohendorf). From the sources researched, it is known that it was built in the second half of the nineteenth century on the order of Piotr Alkantara Marcin Donimirski. The author takes a closer look at the stages of construction of this chapel, its furnishings, the renovations carried out, as well as its condition before, during and after the Second World War. The following are buried in this place: Piotr, Wacław, Zygmunt and Czesław Donimirski. The chapel was also the place where the baptism and first communion of Witold Donimirski’s children were elebrated (after 1900). During the communist regime it was devastated and the remains of the deceased insulted.

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Лишаване от право на пенсия в българската пенсионна система (1944–1993)

Лишаване от право на пенсия в българската пенсионна система (1944–1993)

Author(s): Alexander Hristov / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 2/2023

This publication examines and analyzes certain aspects of institutional oppression and social exclusion in the social policy of Bulgaria between 1944–1993, applied to persons deprived of the right to a pension due to „fascist activity“. The separate social-legislative measures and initiatives of the state and political (party) government as part of the penal practices of the socialist (communist) regime are traced. The specific elements characterizing the repressive nature of the system and the ways for its (mitigation) overcoming during the indicated period are derived.

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Savjetovanje o uređenju i novoj namjeni tvrđave Nehaj u Senju, 1963. godine

Savjetovanje o uređenju i novoj namjeni tvrđave Nehaj u Senju, 1963. godine

Author(s): Helena Schaps Knifić / Language(s): English,Croatian Issue: 1/2023

The situation in one of the most destroyed Croatian towns in the Second World War conditioned the need for the gathering of professions and politics in Senj. In the bombings of 1943 and 1944-1945, between 70% and 80% of the building stock was destroyed. Disunity in opinions between the citizenry, politics and conservation services hindered any progress. One of the first activities of the Senj Town Museum, after its formal establishment in 1962, was the Consultation about the arrangement and contemporary use of the Nehaj fortress debate. It took place in the premises of the Fortress on 22nd July in 1963. It brought together the most eminent experts in the field of monument heritage protection, planning and design, as well as representatives of the political structures of the then State, Republic, District, Town and the army. The significance of the Consultation lay in the decisions made, which were given formal and executive powers. This one-day assembly showed how exceptional efficiency and unity can be achieved with good preparation, especially regarding the position regarding the sources and methods of financing the renovation and stipulating the purpose (for example, exclusively tourist or hospitality). Nehaj was intended to be arranged as a museum to house the Uskok Collection, in accordance with all modern conservation knowledge and methods. The Consultation was one of the cornerstones of the subsequent activities of the Senj Town Museum, of the first director Ante Glavičić and his collaborators and successors, in the systematic reconnaissance and restoration of the architectural heritage of Senj. It was placed in the context of the post-war period and the reconstruction and revitalisation of the architectural heritage that had already been started and/ or carried out. It also looks at the role of some of the main stakeholders in decision-making (the People’s Committee of the Municipality of Senj, the Senj Museum Society, the Senj Town Museum, the Council of Citizens for the Reconstruction of the Nehaj Fortress), consideration and design (JAZU Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, conservation institutes in Rijeka and Zagreb), as well as the organisational processes and circumstances of the carrying out of the works (Stonemason’s group, engineers M. Hudec and K. Prpić). Amongst the results prompted by the guidelines and conclusions of the Consultation, the systematic work on the collection of archival materials (M. Viličić, A. Glavičić) necessary for the preparation of projects (J. Denzler, M. Viličić, conservation institutes) and the planning of the Uskok and other museum collections, architectural surveying of the old town centre and the Nehaj fortress (M. Viličić), the established good cooperation with scientific and professional institutions, conservators and architects, preparation of studies and scientific papers on the subject of architectural monuments of Senj and more all stand out. It is especially worth looking at those beginnings in the light of Senj’s architectural heritage (without the archaeological) today registered in the Register of Cultural Property of the Republic of Croatia as permanently (10 lots) or preventively protected (1 lot).

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Държавният институт за глухонеми в Скопие (1943 – 1944 г.)
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Държавният институт за глухонеми в Скопие (1943 – 1944 г.)

Author(s): Zhivko Lefterov / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 4/2023

The article examines a practically unknown episode of educational and social policy during the Bulgarian rule of Vardar Macedonia 1941 – 1944: the opening of the State Institute for the Deaf and Dumb in Skopje. Regardless of the difficult wartime conditions and the unresolved problems of the deaf community in the old boundaries of the country, the Bulgarian state, guided by responsibility and humanity towards the deaf schoolchildren in the new lands, including Pirot and Vrana districts, made maximum efforts to respond to their needs and to fulfil the endeavour. Unfortunately, despite the finding of a suitable building and its equipment, the secondment of appropriately trained teachers from the three institutes for the deaf and dumb in Bulgaria and the allocation of the necessary budget funds, the activity of the State Institute for the Deaf and Dumb in Skopje, which onlystarted at the end of 1943, was discontinued already at the beginning of 1944 – given the end of classes and the evacuation of a number of educational institutions due to the bombing of the city by the Allies.

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Müzakereden Muahedeye: Türkiye ile İsviçre İlişkileri Bağlamında Türkiye’deki İsviçreli Göçmenlerin Durumu (1918-1965)

Müzakereden Muahedeye: Türkiye ile İsviçre İlişkileri Bağlamında Türkiye’deki İsviçreli Göçmenlerin Durumu (1918-1965)

Author(s): Çiğdem Dumanlı / Language(s): Turkish Issue: 2/2023

The issue of migration and migrants has been institutionalized since the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire established commercial, political, economic and social interaction and communication not only with Muslims but also with non-Muslims, both through the people living in the Ottoman lands and the people living in the border countries and has introduced various regulations on these over the decades. At the end of the First World War and during the construction process of Republican Turkey, policy about migration and migrants was brought to the agenda during the Lausanne Conference yet. The delegation participating in the conference held discussions on this issue in Lausanne. In these negotiations, there are also Swiss officials, who were not actually involved in the conference. Discussions about the Swiss, who are represented since the Ottoman Era in smaller numbers than citizens of other European countries, has started during this conference, and the subsequent process was determined by the foreign policy principles of the Ankara government after Lausanne. Switzerland appears to have adopted at a later stage the new process that includes the recognition of Ankara as the capital, the new government's full independence in the international arena and that is based on the understanding of fundamental and official treaty texts than Germany and Austria. Trade and Residence agreements for Turkish citizens going to Switzerland or Swiss citizens coming from Switzerland lasted for a long time because of this reason but signed on its reciprocity merits between the two countries ultimately.

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Osmanlı’dan Cumhuriyet’e Tartışmalı Bir Bürokrat: Sururizâde Ali Nazif Bey (1865-1935)

Osmanlı’dan Cumhuriyet’e Tartışmalı Bir Bürokrat: Sururizâde Ali Nazif Bey (1865-1935)

Author(s): Ozan Can Akpinar / Language(s): Turkish Issue: Sp. Issue/2023

Born in 1865 in Antalya, Sururizâde Ali Nazif Sururi was a bureaucrat who received a decent education, specialized in law and literature, and authored numerous works. He started his civil service career in the Vice Secretarial of the Royal Court after completing his internship, and in 1901 he was appointed as a member of the Council of State, which would bring him bureaucratic fame. However, he was excluded from the Council during the Second Constitutional Era due to his work as a sleuth and his loyalty to Abdülhamid II and was even exiled in later years on the grounds that he was an opponent of the Constitutional Monarchy. During the Armistice period, he was among the founding members of the Assocciation of the Friends of England in Turkey. Despite having such a past, in the following years, since he published works that supported the values advocated by the Republican administration, nothing was against him after the proclamation of the Republic; on the contrary, they tried to benefit from his state experience. Accordingly, in this study, the life and intellectual world of Sururizâde Ali Nazif Sururi, whose life story is full of controversy, is analyzed within the atmosphere of the era.

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Culture of (Dis)Trust
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Culture of (Dis)Trust

Author(s): Nikolay Poppetrov / Language(s): English Issue: 3-4/2023

Ana Luleva, Book Review

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Subjektiivsuse aspekt Aurora Semperi kontserdikriitikas aastail 1938–1940 ja 1957–1965

Subjektiivsuse aspekt Aurora Semperi kontserdikriitikas aastail 1938–1940 ja 1957–1965

Author(s): Meeta Morozov / Language(s): Estonian Issue: 87/2023

The article examines the subjective aspect in concert reviews by Estonian music critic, pianist, teacher and music historian Aurora Semper (1899–1982), investigating whether and how different socio-political context influenced the manifestation of Semper’s subjective evaluations and taste in her writings for the newspapers Postimees (1938–1940) and Sirp ja Vasar (1956–1965). The paper focuses on the question of to what extent Semper’s subjective aesthetic understandings developed by the 1930s, such as seeing chamber music at the top of the hierarchy of musical genres, her educational background, including piano studies and the experience of West European musical life, were expressed during the Soviet regime with its demands on re-evaluation of music according to the Marxist-Leninist ideology. Comparing Semper’s reviews written in the late 1930s and 1960s, enough common features emerge. The found similarities include the preference for chamber music/ensembles and symphony concerts as well as the focus on the performance aspect, interest in historical issues and the observation of the long-term development of the collective/artist. Also, the attitude towards contemporary music is generally supportive and favourable. As a difference, one can notice the absence of stage works’ reviews in Semper’s Soviet-era writings and a stronger ideological message which is not emphasized but which Semper expressed when necessary in her attitudes, as well as the use of language and emphases. It can therefore be concluded that Aurora Semper’s subjectivity, which was strongly shaped by her studies in Europe (Germany, France) in the 1920s, broad mind and curiosity for knowledge, marriage to an intelligent and tolerant writer and politician Johannes Semper, music history teaching experience and a delicate character, became visible in the relatively free press of the independent Estonia in the 1930s and remained generally unchanged, despite the new socio-political context, in the much more rigid and ideologically controlled Soviet years.

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ZEMPRO/DOPOS: prisilni otkup poljodjelskih proizvoda u Nezavisnoj Državi Hrvatskoj

ZEMPRO/DOPOS: prisilni otkup poljodjelskih proizvoda u Nezavisnoj Državi Hrvatskoj

Author(s): Nikica Barić / Language(s): Croatian Issue: 23/2023

The paper presents the activities of enterprises established by the Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH), whose aim was to collect food surpluses from peasants. These enterprises were Central State Enterprise for Agricultural Products (Državna poslovna središnjica za zemaljske proizvode, ZEMPRO) and Central State Enterprise for Supplies (Državna opskrbna poslovna središnjica, DO-POS). NDH proclaimed a state monopoly on agricultural products and peasants were forced to sell their surpluses to the state which then distributed this food to other parts of population and to armed forces. Slavonia and Syrmia were the main agricultural regions in NDH and the activities of ZEMPRO and later DOPOS was to a large degree concentrated to those regions. With the development and strengthening of the People’s Liberation Movement and its Partisan army and constant military operations on NDH territory, collection and distribution of food became a major problem for NDH administration. Peasantry was generally disinclined to sell its surpluses to the state, because these were inadequately paid, in fact paid in NDH’s currency whose value was diminished by rising inflation. Very often peasants were not able to purchase other goods with money, while black market offered the peasants better opportunities to barter food for other goods. From 1943 NDH authorities tried to resolve this problem by offering the peasants industrial and other products for their food surpluses. The representatives of NDH authorities and its ruling Ustasha movement were aware that forced requisition had created dissatisfaction among peasantry and the regime wanted to retain its loyalty. In fact, during 1943 there were certain initiatives among NDH’s ruling circles to restructure the system of forced collection of agricultural products. Instead of state imposed requisition, this duty was to be delegated to peasants’ cooperatives, which had tradition among Croatian peasantry. But, ultimately, the NDH authorities did not accept such solution, obviously because they did not have faith that agricultural surpluses could be collected without the strong government control. The end of World War II and the establishment of the new communist regime in Croatia, now as a federal unit in the new Yugoslav state, presented a distinctive break with the NDH regime. Nevertheless, the new regime retained the system of forced requisition of food from peasants, which brought new conflicts between the peasantry and the communist regime lasting until the early 1950s.

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The Compensation Files from Dâmbovița County in the Bad Arolsen Archives: A Quantitative Approach to Holocaust Victims under Romanian Rule
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The Compensation Files from Dâmbovița County in the Bad Arolsen Archives: A Quantitative Approach to Holocaust Victims under Romanian Rule

Author(s): Petre Matei / Language(s): English Issue: 16/2023

Hoping to obtain large amounts of hard currency from West Germany, with which they had just resumed diplomatic relations, the Romanian authorities launched a large-scale campaign in 1970 to collect 155,000 applications for compensation from victims of the persecution endured in the course of World War II. Although the West-Germans agreed to receive the documents, they refused to enter into negotiations. They invoked various arguments, including the fact that much of the persecution could actually be attributed to the Romanian State itself. The collection remained in Germany and is currently held by ITS Bad Arolsen, without yet receiving the attention it deserves.

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Prikazi i osvrti

Prikazi i osvrti

Author(s): Petar Seletković,Ivan Marjanović,Danica Marčeta,Ana Rajković Pejić,Josip Lučić,Mirko Savković,Božena Vranješ-Šoljan,Milan Vrbanus,Eldina Lovaš / Language(s): Croatian Issue: 23/2023

Review of: Antal MOLNÁR: Zagrebačka biskupija i osmanska Slavonija u 17. stoljeću: uloga Katoličke crkve u teritorijalnoj integraciji kontinentalne Hrvatske (Zagreb: Hrvatski institut za povijest, 2022). 225 str. ISBN 978-953-8335-27-3. Kronika Franjevačkog samostana u Vukovaru. Knjiga II (1781.-1826.), transkripcija, kritičko izdanje i prijevod Petar Ušković Croata, stručna redakcija prijevoda Šime Demo (Vukovar: Državni arhiv u Vukovaru - Franjevački samostan Vukovar, 2022). LII + 843 str. ISBN 978-953-7980-33-7. Lidija BARIŠIĆ BOGIŠIĆ: O neslavenskom stanovništvu na vukovarskom području (Zagreb: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada, 2022). 332 str. ISBN: 978-953-169-497-1. Lidija BARIŠIĆ BOGIŠIĆ: O neslavenskom stanovništvu na vukovarskom području (Zagreb: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada, 2022). 332 str. ISBN: 978-953-169-497-1. Martina KELAVA i Ivan LUČIĆ: Dnevnik Mate Ivacića (Drenovci: Muzej Cvelferije, 2022). 113 str. ISBN 978-953-48152-5-0. Martina BITUNJAC: Žene i ustaški pokret (Zagreb: Srednja Europa, 2023). 240 str. ISBN 978-953-8281-88-4. Berislav MAJHUT: Na Titonicu: hrvatska dječja književnost u razdoblju socijalističke Jugoslavije (Zagreb: Hrvatska sveučilišna naklada, 2022). 181 str. ISBN 978-953-169-490-2. Károly BUSCH: A háború árnyékában: emlékek, gondolatok (Pécs: Közleke-déstudományi egyesület, 2022). 116 str. ISBN 978-963-8121-96-7. Ivan Vitez – Slavonski plemić, zagrebački kanonik, ugarski primas, promicatelj humanizma, Znanstveni skup povodom 550. godišnjice smrti, Zagreb, 16. rujna 2022. Continuity and Change in Medieval Central Europe. The Fifth Biennial Conference of Medieval Central Europe Research Network (MECERN), Faculty of Arts, Comenius University, Bratislava, 27. – 29. travnja 2023.

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ZÁVAŽNÁ SONDA DO SVĚTA DĚTÍ A MLÁDEŽE V ČESKÝCH ZEMÍCH V LETECH 1948–1970

ZÁVAŽNÁ SONDA DO SVĚTA DĚTÍ A MLÁDEŽE V ČESKÝCH ZEMÍCH V LETECH 1948–1970

Author(s): Jiří Křesťan / Language(s): Czech Issue: 2/2019

Review of: Knapík, Jiří – Franc, Martin a kol.: Mezi pionýrským šátkem a mopedem. Děti, mládež a socialismus v českých zemích 1948–1970. Academia, Praha 2018. 727 s. Ediční řada Šťastné zítřky, sv. 30.

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Twórcy, władze PRL, bezpieka. Raport o stanie badań 2014–2022

Twórcy, władze PRL, bezpieka. Raport o stanie badań 2014–2022

Author(s): Sebastian Ligarski / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2022

After World War II, culture became a tool that the communist authorities used to take over the so-called government of souls in Poland. Therefore, they introduced revolutionary changes in that field to bring it in line with the Soviet models. The state was to be the sole patron, setting the directions for artists to follow, and the relevant party bodies or institutions were to control creative processes to ensure that they did not become distorted in a way inconsistent with the prevailing ideology. According to the theorists, this was the only way to ensure more efficient management of culture and a better understanding of its needs. The communists used creators for their own purposes in a utilitarian way and, at the same time, they pushed those who refused to comply to the margins of social life. The article is an attempt to describe the state of research in the period from the publication of the 2014 issue of “Memory and Justice” dedicated to the subject in question until today. For over a dozen years, scientific research has been conducted in that field, the purpose of which is to explain and describe the mechanisms of the authorities’ influence on creative circles in the period from 1944 to 1989. The progress made is noticeable, although the degree to which individual environments are described greatly varies. The best results have been achieved in the field of writers or filmmakers, though a lot of work still needs to be done when it comes to musicians or visual artists.

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Muzycy pokolenia big-beatu w Zielonej Górze w okresie PRL

Muzycy pokolenia big-beatu w Zielonej Górze w okresie PRL

Author(s): Arkadiusz Tyda / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2022

The musical Zielona Góra was known in Poland mainly for the Soviet Song Festival. Above all, the city had a different life – the local one. In Zielona Góra, the interest in big-beat music began in the 1960s. In 1963 the band Lubusze was founded, basing its repertoire on the music of The Shadows. Jolanie and Inni soon gained popularity in the Lubuskie region. Both groups were established in 1966. They were successful in national and regional competitions. In 1969 Jarosław Kukulski founded the band Waganci, basing it on former musicians of Jolanie. His band appeared in the audience’s nationwide consciousness and Kukulski himself, together with his wife Anna Jantar as a singer, became a famous musician and composer. In 1970, Polish big-beat began to transform into “real” rock music. In Zielona Góra, on the other hand, new groups important for the region were created, including Akces and Układ. At that time, various types of wedding and dance ensembles were already forming, created for profit. There were difficulties in finding musicians in the city who would like to play their own songs. Other difficulties were, among others state control and little media interest – especially nationwide ones. When Akces broke up, some of its musicians created the Weekend, which was one of the last manifestations of the artistic activity of musicians coming from the big-beat generation.

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Andrzej Linert, Jerzego Adama Brandhubera obrazy Auschwitz, Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau

Andrzej Linert, Jerzego Adama Brandhubera obrazy Auschwitz, Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau

Author(s): Lucyna Sadzikowska / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2022

Review of: Andrzej Linert, Jerzego Adama Brandhubera obrazy Auschwitz, Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau, Oświęcim 2021, 208 s.

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Jewish Life in Post-War Czechoslovakia. Unveiling the Aftermath

Jewish Life in Post-War Czechoslovakia. Unveiling the Aftermath

Author(s): Hana Kubátová / Language(s): English Issue: 3/2023

Review of: SEDLICKÁ, Magdalena: „Není přítel jako přítel“: Židé v národním státě Čechů a Slováků 1945–1948. Praha, Academia – Masarykův ústav a Archiv AV ČR, v. v. i., 2021, 225 pages, ISBN 978-80-200-3307-9 and 978-80-88304-58-6.

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Amtsgericht Frankfurt am Main HRB 102056
VAT number: DE300273105
Phone: +49 (0)69-20026820
Email: info@ceeol.com

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