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 digital photography collection of Harald Hauswald was acquired at the end of 2017 by the Federal Foundation for the Reappraisal of the SED Dictatorship. It represents a valuable collection from one of the most significant photographers from the GDR. Hauswald’s snapshots from everyday life in East Berlin provide insight into a bygone era, and which acquired public acclaim and support following the toppling of the regime in 1990. The current collection is in the process to be expanded and by the end of 2019 is expected to include the photographer’s entire life work in digitalized form.
The breakdance movement emerged in the GDR in the 1980s. The private collection of Heiko Hahnewald represents one of the largest repositories of materials concerning this movement and provides insight into how breakdance culture found its place within the confines of life in the GDR as well as its continued development after 1990.
The Rock Museum was established in 2014 as a grassroots initiative by former musicians, experts, and collectors. The museum is the first collection in Hungary that presents documents and items of importance to the Hungarian rock and popular music scene (with an international and primarily regional focus) from the late 1950s to the present. Generally, the phenomenon of rock music under state socialism is considered a form of cultural resistance.
The unique resource value of the collection stems from the historical fact that the continuity of Hungarian scouting established in 1910 was in fact maintained by the émigré Hungarian scouting movement worldwide for more than four decades, from 1948 to 1989, in a period when it was prohibited in communist Hungary. According to Hungarian émigré scout leaders, the movement was intended to serve a two-front struggle of cultural resistance: on one hand against the official forgery of “the real” national heritage in communist Hungary; and on the other against the linguistic and cultural assimilation of Hungarian émigré youth within the multi-ethnic environment of some 20 countries of 4 continents worldwide.