Marking the 50th anniversary of events in 1956, that were a major turning point in the history of communist-led Eastern Europe, this book contains a selection of some of the most recent research on those momentous events and their memory and legacy. The book contains edited contributions from historians and social scientists from Hungary, Poland, the UK and the USA. Their contributions are the fruit of research which has only been possible since 1989. In the years since the fall of the communist regimes the state archives have been opened to researchers and it has been possible to collect the testimony of eye-witnesses without fear of repression and censorship. The outcome of 1956 led to Poland embarking on its own distinctive version o...
Europe was divided by ideologies almost in the entire second half of the twentieth century. Central ...
This book offers an international reading of the Polish socialist regime’s history in the 1970s, and...
Statement of the Soviet Government, October 30, 1956 Imre Nagy: Last Message, November 4, 195
The history of Eastern Europe during the Cold War is one punctuated by protest and rebellion. Revolu...
Following the political transition in Hungary and in East-Central Europe in 1989-90 an archival revo...
The French Communist Party (PCF) was one of the strongest in the world communist movement after the ...
The year of 1989 marked a turning point in world history. During the last six months of that year, t...
The year of 1989 marked a turning point in world history. During the last six months of that year, t...
This contribution examines the Polish experience of de-Stalinisation and its consequences. In 1956, ...
This book examines the post-war history of Eastern Europe from the perspective of social history. It...
One of the most unexpected outcomes of the Soviet bloc\u27s transition out of communism has been the...
The article is a brief survey and evaluation of historical research on Poznań 1956 protests, the pol...
The Soviet Union and Dissent in the Eastern Bloc: An Exploration of Post-Stalinist Resistance in the...
Jan Adamec, Hungary 1956: from a reform of socialism to a national uprising Dizertační práce Univerz...
The article highlights the reaction of Polish society and government to the Hungarian Revolution of ...
Europe was divided by ideologies almost in the entire second half of the twentieth century. Central ...
This book offers an international reading of the Polish socialist regime’s history in the 1970s, and...
Statement of the Soviet Government, October 30, 1956 Imre Nagy: Last Message, November 4, 195
The history of Eastern Europe during the Cold War is one punctuated by protest and rebellion. Revolu...
Following the political transition in Hungary and in East-Central Europe in 1989-90 an archival revo...
The French Communist Party (PCF) was one of the strongest in the world communist movement after the ...
The year of 1989 marked a turning point in world history. During the last six months of that year, t...
The year of 1989 marked a turning point in world history. During the last six months of that year, t...
This contribution examines the Polish experience of de-Stalinisation and its consequences. In 1956, ...
This book examines the post-war history of Eastern Europe from the perspective of social history. It...
One of the most unexpected outcomes of the Soviet bloc\u27s transition out of communism has been the...
The article is a brief survey and evaluation of historical research on Poznań 1956 protests, the pol...
The Soviet Union and Dissent in the Eastern Bloc: An Exploration of Post-Stalinist Resistance in the...
Jan Adamec, Hungary 1956: from a reform of socialism to a national uprising Dizertační práce Univerz...
The article highlights the reaction of Polish society and government to the Hungarian Revolution of ...
Europe was divided by ideologies almost in the entire second half of the twentieth century. Central ...
This book offers an international reading of the Polish socialist regime’s history in the 1970s, and...
Statement of the Soviet Government, October 30, 1956 Imre Nagy: Last Message, November 4, 195