alternatívne formy vzdelávania
alternatívne životné štýly a každodenná rezistencia
avantgarda, neoavantgarda
cenzúra
demokratická opozícia
divadlo a múzické umenia dozor
emigrácia/exil
film filozofické/teoretické hnutia folklór
hnutie za ľudské práva hudba kritická veda
kultúra mladých
literatúra a literárna kritika
menšinové hnutia
mierové hnutie
nezávislá žurnalistika
náboženský aktivizmus
národnostné hnutia národné hnutia ochrana životného prostredia
odporcovia vojenskej služby
populárna kultúra
samizdat a tamizdat sociálne hnutia stranícki disidenti umenie nových médií undergroundová kultúra
vedecká kritika
vizuálne umenia
výtvarné umenie
ľudia, ktorí prežili perzekúcie zo strany autoritárskych/totalitných režimov
študentské hnutie
ženské hnutie
artefakty
film
fotografie
grafiky
hudobné nahrávky
iné
komiksy a karikatúry
nábytok
obrazy
odevy
právna a/alebo finančná dokumentácia
publikácie rukopisy
sochy spomienkové predmety
video záznamy vybavenie
zvukové záznamy úžitkové umenie ďalšie umelecké diela šedá literatúra
The collection testifies to the thirty-six-year activity of Croatian journalist and writer Jakša Kušan (1931), who propagated the idea of a democratic, pluralistic and free Croatia in exile from 1955 to 1990. By editing and publishing the non-partisan magazine Nova Hrvatska, he tried to inform the Croatian and global public about the suppression of human rights and civil liberties in socialist Croatia and Yugoslavia.
The Collection of Croatian-American historian Jere Jareb (PhD) contains over 4,500 books, magazines and various brochures in Croatian, English, German, Italian and Slovenian. Dr Jareb, who began compiling the collection in the 1950s, donated it to the Croatian Institute of History in 1997. A particularly intriguing part of the collection are the numerous editions of books, magazines and brochures published by Croatian emigrants in the USA who were critical of the communist regime in Croatia and Yugoslavia. Some of these editions are not available anywhere else in Croatia.
The collection includes various pieces of documentation about the ‘Phosphorite War’ that took place in Estonia in 1987, and material about the Estonian television programme ‘Panda’ in the second half of the 1980s. The collector of the material is Juhan Aare, the journalist and politician who unleashed the Phosphorite War. The most valuable part of the collection is made up of the letters written by people in Estonia and sent to Juhan Aare or to Estonian Television. These letters refer to the environmental situation and the national question in Estonia.
Justas Paleckis (1899–1980) was a chairman of the presidium of the Supreme Council of Soviet Lithuania from 1940 to 1974. Paleckis’ collection holds his personal papers, various manuscripts, notebooks, correspondence with Lithuanian writers and scholars, and letters from victims of Stalinist repressions. The documents reflect the aspirations and the ambitions of the Lithuanian cultural elite to preserve and develop the Lithuanian cultural heritage.