alternativne oblike izobraževanja
alternativni življenjski slog in odproti proti vsakdanjemu
avantgarda, neoavantgarda
cenzura
demokratična opozicija državni nadzor
emigracija/izgnanstvo
film filozofska/teoretična gibanja
gibanje za človekove pravice glasba
književnost in književna kritika kritična znanost
likovna umetnost ljudska kultura
manjšinska gibanja medijska umetnost
mirovna gibanja nacionalna gibanja
narodna gibanja
neodvisno novinarstvo partijski disidenti
popularna kultura
samizdat in tamizdat socialna gibanja
survivors of persecutions under authoritarian/totalitarian regimes
svoboda vesti
theatre and performing arts
underground culture
verski aktivizem
visual arts
women's movement
youth culture zaštita okoliša
znanstvena kritika
študentsko gibanje
artefakti
drugo
film
fotografije
glasbeni posnetki
glasovni posnetki
grafika
karikature
kipi
likovna dela
obleke
pohištvo
pravna in/ali finančna dokumentacija
predmeti uporabne umetnosti preostala umetniška dela
publikacije rokopisi siva literatura spominki strojna opema
video posnetki
The Igor Cașu Collection represents above all an alternative collection of archival materials about the history of the Soviet Regime in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (MSSR), originating from major public archives in the Republic of Moldova that preserve such documents without granting free access to them. The founder of this collection had privileged access to the items that are now part of his collection in the short time span when he acted as vice-president of the Commission for the Study and Evaluation of the Communist Regime in Moldova in 2010. In contrast to the public archives, the Igor Cașu Collection, which also includes an oral history interviews section, is shared with fellow researchers.
The art collection of Indrek Hirv consists of works by artists who continued the spirit of art from before the Soviet occupation. Many of them were persecuted, and later they did not obtain official recognition. Some became reformers of art, who resisted the Soviet discourse and Socialist Realism. Although some works in this collection depicted directly forbidden subject matter, like prison camps and prisoners, resistance to the Soviet regime is expressed mostly through the style.
The digital collection of the Oral History Center contains more than 2000 interviews with twentieth-century witnesses, which are divided into different themes and topics, thus presenting a unique collection of professionally created interviews and memories, many of which are related to the theme of cultural opposition.
The Ion Monoran Collection documents the intellectual profile of one of the leaders of the underground cultural movements in the Banat, who, thanks to his ability to catalyse the action of the crowd gathered in the streets of Timişoara on 16 December 1989, became one of the figures who incontestably made a mark on the Romanian Revolution.
The Irina Margareta Nistor Private Collection includes a series of written documents, together with a few dozen VHS video cassettes preserving a small part of the Western films that were introduced clandestinely into Romania between 1985 and 1989, to be translated and dubbed and then distributed on video cassettes (semi)clandestinely. This collection epitomises a popular culture phenomenon without any equivalent in Eastern Europe, which emerged in Romania as a reaction to the reduction of the official programme broadcast on television channels to just two hours per day and to news broadcasts about the activity of Nicolae Ceauşescu and the leadership of the Romanian Communist Party.