
New Books in History Ann Komaromi, "Soviet Samizdat: Imagining a New Society" (Cornell UP, 2022)
Feb 8, 2026
Ann Komaromi, a University of Toronto professor researching underground publishing, explores samizdat as an uncensored network of journals, art folios, and readings. She discusses poetry’s role, regional and religious samizdat communities, conceptual art documentation, striking cover art, and samizdat’s ties to later digital circulation methods.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Samizdat As Extra‑Gutenberg Publishing
- Samizdat means self-publishing and formed a distinct post‑Stalin textual culture in the USSR.
- Ann Komaromi frames it as
Secret Speech As A Circulating Text
- Khrushchev's
Samizdat Built Crimean Tatar Consciousness
- Crimean Tatar activists used samizdat from 1965 to maintain a bulletin called Information about deportation and the right to return.
- Komaromi shows the bulletin built national consciousness and publicized ongoing injustices.



