авангард, неоавангард
альтернативні способи життя і повсякденний опір
будні андеграунду
витончені мистецтва
відмовники з міркувань совісті
візуальне мистецтво
демократична опозиція
еміграція/заслання
етнічні рухи
жертви переслідувань за авторитарними / тоталітарними режимами
жіночий рух захист навколишнього середовища критична наука
література та літературна критика масова медіа мистецтво
мирні рухи
молодіжна культурa музика нагляд народна культура
наукова критика національні рухи
незалежна журналістика неофіційна освітня і видавнича діяльність партійні дисиденти
правозахисний рух
релігійна активність
рухи меншин
самвидав і тамвидав соціальні рухи
студентський рух
театр і виконавське мистецтво філософські / теоретичні рухи
фільм
цензура
артефакти
відеозаписи
голосові записи
графіка
картини
меблі
музичні записи
мультфільми та карикатури обладнання
одяг пам'ятники предмети народного мистецтва
публікації рукописи
скульптури сіра література
фотографії
фільм
юридична та/або фінансова документація
інший
This collection consists primarily of the items confiscated by the Securitate on 1 April 1977, on the occasion of the house search and arrest of the driving force behind an emerging movement in defence of human rights in Romania, Paul Goma, a writer censored in Romania but successful abroad. A particular feature of this collection is that the confiscated items were not destroyed, but were preserved by the Securitate and finally transferred to CNSAS in 2002, from where they were returned to Goma in 2005. Thus, the collection is one of the few which travelled after 1989 from Romania into exile and is now to be found in Paris, where Goma was forced to emigrate a few months after his arrest and the confiscation of the collection.
The Pavao Tijan Collection is deposited in the Archives of the Croatian Academy of Science and Arts in Zagreb. It demonstrates the cultural-oppositional activities of the Croatian émigré Pavao Tijan, who lived in Madrid after the Second World War. There, Tijan organized anti-communist activities against the Yugoslav regime and also against global communism during the time of the Cold War. This collection is very important to the little known Croatian cultural history of the émigré colony of Spain.
The collection of Pavel Kohout is an extraordinary set of materials documenting a transformation of the author's personality from a prominent literary into a representative of the cultural opposition engaging in the Charter 77 and then being in exile.
The collection of the Radio Free Europe consists of 17 000 recordings of broadcasts on magnetic tapes and casettes, most of them covering the key historical events in Poland and within Polish diaspora. Polish Section of the Radio Free Europe broadcasted political, but also cultural, musical, religious and entertainment content, created by journalists and writers from Polish diaspora in Western Europe. The Radio was one of the main sources of independent news in socialist Poland.
Located at the Józef Piłsudski Institute in London, the Prometheus Collection contains records related to the Promethean movement, the Polish-led alliance of nationalist movements of non-Russian nations and ethnic groups that inhabited the Soviet Union. The origins of the movement go back to Prometheism, Józef Piłsudski's project of weakening imperial and later Bolshevik Russia by supporting the struggle for independence of the peoples of the Baltic, Black and Caspian Sea regions. The Promethean movement encompassed mostly representatives of Ukrainians, Kuban Cossacks, Georgians, Azeris, and north Caucasus nations and relied on the support of the Polish military. After World War II, the movement continued in exile under the leadership of Polish émigrés, mostly Piłsudski's followers. The collection consists of twelve files and contains memoranda, correspondence, newsletters, and photographs of various Promethean activists.