Citations:samvydav

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English citations of samvydav

1971
1974
1978
1980
1996
2007
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1971, The Ukrainian Quarterly, v 26–27, Ukrainian Congress Committee of America, p 224:
    [. . .] possessed at the time of arrests documents and materials of the illegal samvydav (self-published, that is, underground).
  • 1974, Yaroslav Bihun, ed., Boomerang: The Works of Valentyn Moroz, Baltimore: Smoloskyp, p 166:
    [. . .] camp and widely disseminated in the Ukrainian and Russian samvydavs.
  • 1978, Stephan M. Horak, Russia, the USSR, and Eastern Europe: A Bibliographic Guide to English Language Publications, 1964–1974, Littleton, Colo.: Libraries Unlimited, p 325:
    Many of these appeals appeared in Ukrains’kyi visnyk, a samvydav Ukrainian publication, and a surprising amount eventually were smuggled out of Ukraine to the West.
  • 1980, Ukrains’ka hromads’ka hrupa spryiannia vykonanniu helsinks’kykh uhod (w: Ukrainian Helsinki Group), The Human Rights Movement in Ukraine: Documents of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group, 1976–1980, Baltimore: Smoloskyp, p 40:
    Arrested were scores of young people who sympathized with I. Dzyuba, whose book, Internationalism or Russification?, became popular in the samvydav.
  • 1996, w: Paul Robert Magocsi, A History of Ukraine, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, p 661:
    Although some members of the group changed their writing in response to warnings from the party, others continued to publish in the so-called samvydav, or publishing underground, in which self-published works were illegally produced and distributed.
  • 2007, w: Serhy Yekelchyk, Ukraine: Birth of a Modern Nation, Oxford University Press, p 165:
    One result was the politicization of samvydav (self-publishing, samizdat in Russian), unofficial literature copied on typewriters or by hand and distributed secretly. At first mostly forbidden literary works, by the mid-1960s Ukrainian samvydav developed into bold political journalism.