alternativní vzdělávání
alternativní životní styly a každodenní/všední odpor
avantgarda, neo-avantgarda
cenzura
demokratická opozice
divadelní a performační umění
emigrace/exil
etnická hnutí
film filosofická/teoretická hnutí
folklorní kultura
hnutí menšin
hnutí na obranu lidských práv hudba kritická/nezávislá věda
kultura mladých
literatura a literární kritika media Arts
mírová hnutí
nezávislá žurnalistika
náboženské aktivity
národní hnutí ochrana životního prostředí
odpírači vojenské služby
populární kultura
přeživší perzekuce ze strany autoritativních/totalitních režimů
samizdat sledování, dohled sociální hnutí straničtí disidenti
studentská hnutí undergroundová kultura
vizuální umění
výtvarné umění
vědecká kritika
ženské hnutí
artefakt/umělý výrobek
film
fotografie
grafika
hudební nahrávky
jiné jiný umělecký předmět
kreslené vtipy, karikatury, komiksy
nábytek
oděvy
právní a/nebo finanční dokumentace publikace předměty užitého umění rukopisy
sochy suvenýry video nahrávky vybavení
výtvarné umělecké dílo zvukové nahrávky šedá literatura
The Nebojša Popov Collection is held at the Historical Archives of Belgrade in Serbia. Nebojša Popov, a sociologist and intellectual, became one of the most renowned antiwar activists in Serbia and former Yugoslavia and was known for his involvement in various intellectual, academic, and political activities critical of contemporary authorities. From 1975 to 1981, Popov's work was deemed politically unsuitable so that he was excluded from academic institutions. This collection contains manuscripts, press clippings, court decisions, appeals, minutes of opposition meetings and round table discussions, book excerpts, articles from academic journals, and about three-hundred books from Popov's private library.
This ad-hoc collection is related to the activities of the first explicitly anti-communist organisation of the post-Stalinist period that operated in the Moldavian SSR, the Democratic Union of Socialists. The materials within this collection focus on the activity of the founder and main ideologue of the group, Nicolae Dragoș, a schoolteacher who challenged the political and ideological monopoly of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union under the impact of Khrushchev’s “thaw” and aimed at creating an alternative political movement based on a platform of “democratic socialism.” The Dragoș case files, originally held in the Archive of the Intelligence and Security Service of the Republic of Moldova (formerly the KGB Archive), were transferred to the National Archive of the Republic of Moldova in 2012.
The collection documents the work of Croatian historian and political émigré Nikola Čolak (1914-1996). In 1966, he belonged to a group of academics and thinkers from Zadar, who officially sought to break the Communist Party's monopoly on truth by establishing the first journal not controlled by the Party. After the suppression of this initiative, Čolak was forced into exile in Italy. The so-called Movement of Independent Intellectuals represented the first attempt to create a formal cultural opposition circle not only in Croatia, but in Yugoslavia as a whole, which is recorded through this collection.