New Books in Intellectual History

Ann Komaromi, "Soviet Samizdat: Imagining a New Society" (Cornell UP, 2022)

Feb 7, 2026
Ann Komaromi, a University of Toronto scholar of alternative publishing and nonconformist Soviet literature, explores samizdat as extra‑Gutenberg underground publishing. She discusses its role after Khrushchev, regional networks like Crimean Tatar and Baptist presses, poetic and conceptual art communities, archive hunts for fragile texts, and samizdat’s complex echoes in the digital age.
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INSIGHT

Samizdat As Extra‑Gutenberg Publishing

  • Samizdat is best understood as 'self-publishing' that produced variable, mutable texts rather than fixed printed editions.
  • Ann Komaromi frames it as an 'extra-Gutenberg' textual culture that reshaped social effects of publication.
INSIGHT

Secret Speech As A Catalyst

  • Khrushchev's secret speech functioned as a textual catalyst that leaked beyond closed sessions and modeled unofficial circulation.
  • Samizdat extended the Thaw by enabling public discussion and contested limits of de-Stalinization.
ANECDOTE

Crimean Tatar Bulletin 'Information'

  • Crimean Tatar activists produced a samizdat bulletin called Information from 1965 to document deportation, persecution, and the right to return.
  • Historian Gulnara Bekirova credits the bulletin with fostering national consciousness among displaced Crimean Tatars.
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