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  1.  4
    Conceptualising Transnationalism Through Life Histories.Dalia Báthory & Ștefan Bosomitu - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:7-15.
    The term transnationalism has developed into a concept with a broad meaning, defining anything having to do with transgressing the national boundaries. There are limits to it: it has more to do with non-statal actors, it relates to trans-border cultural, political and economic spaces, and it follows identity-defining experiences of individuals who have lived a complex, international life. The current issue of History of Communism in Europe is entitled Transnational Biographies. Destinies at the Crossroads before and after the Cold War (...)
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  2.  4
    ‘A New Era’ is always Dawning. A Linguistic Biography of a Border Crosser and Doppelgänger from Bukovina in the Second Half of the 20th Century.Valeska Bopp-Filimonov - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:141-166.
    This article argues that it was not only physical borders that challenged people’s biographies in the 20th century, but also shifts in ideology, discourse and predominant languages. I shall explore the biography of a man called Cornel, a native of Bukovina who was a communist cultural official in Romania’s capital Bucharest in the 1960s and who became a priest in the 1970s. I shall show that not only obvious breaks such as the beginning and end of communist rule, but ideological (...)
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  3.  4
    The Permanent Suspicion. The Romanian Communist Party and its International Cadres.Ştefan Bosomitu - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:95-118.
    This article attempts to explore the relations between the Romanian Communist Party and its “international” cadres after the end of the Second World War and its accession to power. Beyond a simply descriptive exegesis, the present study tries to capture the evolution of those relationships, and especially how the power relations between the two entities unfolded in the context of a paradigm shift: the legalisation of the party, its transformation into an important force of the political scene and, finally, its (...)
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  4.  4
    Picturing the West – A Slideshow of a Private Production in Communist Romania.Ana-Cristina Irian & Valentin Maier - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:233-267.
    The purpose of this paper is to present and analyse the biography of a passionate 20th century Romanian tourist who lived in Bucharest and travelled across Europe, bringing his (subjective) travel experiences of Western countries to private and public audiences curious about the unknown “abroad” during the 1980s. This case study is about the life and travel experiences of Vasile A. Marinescu, and deals with their visibility and interpretation during the communist era. The research is based on unpublished sources – (...)
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  5.  6
    Defining ‘Baltic Germanness’ in Post-Soviet Latvia and Estonia - Ethnic Germans’ Life Stories between East and West.Lucie Lamy - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:167-188.
    This article, based on interviews conducted in 2019 with Latvian and Estonian citizens ethnically defining themselves as “Baltic Germans”, aims to analyse the way this self-identification is shaped by the experience of the Soviet and post-Soviet periods, and by the ideological polarisation between East and West. Studying this hybrid ethnic belonging allows taking a look at individual life paths through a transnational lens and paying attention to all forms of mobility that play a role in its construction. By integrating the (...)
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  6.  5
    Sean Eady, Four Color Communism: Comic Books and Contested Power in the German Democratic Republic.Manuela Marin - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:271-276.
  7.  8
    Anti-Fascist Exile, Political Print Media, and the Variable Tactics of the Communists in Mexico (1939–1946) - The Case of Hannes Meyer and Lena Meyer-Bergner. [REVIEW]Sandra Neugärtner - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:41-78.
    This article deals with the role of the political print media popular with communists in Mexico when anti-fascism became the code for the behaviour of democratic forces in the face of the provocation of Hitler’s fascism. Under the facade of anti-fascist unity, the German-speaking communist exiles established a publishing culture, from which Hannes Meyer and Lena Meyer-Bergner, who had come to Mexico from Soviet exile and who committed themselves to proletarian internationalism, soon separated or were excluded. Independent of the group, (...)
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  8.  10
    An Albanian Hemingway - Petro Marko’s Recollections of the Spanish Civil War.Enis Sulstarova - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:191-213.
    Petro Marko (1913-1991) was an Albanian journalist, writer and communist activist, who volunteered in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. Afterwards, he was imprisoned in the island of Ustica by the Italian occupiers of Albania during the Second World War and was briefly imprisoned by the communist regime of Albania in the late 1940s. Afterwards he worked as a journalist and a writer, being closely surveyed by the communist regime. The Spanish experience was the most important formative period (...)
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  9.  3
    Theodor Vasilescu – The Dancer Who Took the Romanian Folklore all over the World.Ana Theodorescu - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:215-231.
    The main theme of the proposed paper concerns the professional training and artistic activity of Theodor Vasilescu, choreographer and dancer, specialized in folk dance, with a rich international activity during the communist regime. The analysis will focus on illustrating how the artist’s biography was influenced by a new trend in the satellite states of the U.R.S.S., namely that of transforming traditional dance into art with a political substratum. Also, the main thread of the article will consist in revealing the specific (...)
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  10.  3
    Teresa Noce: an Italian Professional Revolutionary Woman.Anna Tonelli - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:79-93.
    The role of professional revolutionaries is usually reserved for men. One exception is Teresa Noce, a prominent Italian Communist leader in the (residual) quota reserved for women, who was the wife of Luigi Longo, but with an independence that made her existence an original example of militancy and activism. Both underground and within republican Italy, Noce never adapted to what already existed, but fought to subvert the order, especially in the face of exploitation and discrimination. A member of the ICP, (...)
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  11.  6
    Mihail Ralea between the Ministry of Arts and the Romanian Communist Cultural Diplomacy.Cristian Vasile - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:119-138.
    Mihai Ralea was a university professor and prominent representative of the Romanian interwar literary intelligentsia. M. Ralea taught psychology, sociology and aesthetics, and was at the same time the director of a reputed literary magazine (Viaţa românească-Romanian Life). Ralea was also a politician, initially an important member of the National Peasant Party, representing its centre left wing. In his case, one may notice the contradiction between his moral arguments in public and his deeds after he reached positions of power (Minister (...)
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  12.  11
    From Mexico to Moscow via Madrid - the Borodin Mission and the Origins of Communism in Mexico and Spain, 1919-1920.Arturo Zoffmann Rodriguez - 2023 - History of Communism in Europe 11:19-40.
    This article traces the steps of Mikhail Borodin, the first Comintern representative in Mexico and Spain, in 1919-20. He helped create the Mexican and the Spanish communist parties. In order to do this, he latched onto pre-existing networks of transnational activism and recruited a posse of young, committed, and cosmopolitan cadre. Through them, Borodin tried to mobilise the widespread euphoria for Bolshevism that existed among sectors of the Mexican and the Spanish left. However, the potential for vigorous communist movements remained (...)
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