Academic literature on the topic 'Radio Free Europe. Romanian Service'

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Journal articles on the topic "Radio Free Europe. Romanian Service"

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Lazăr, Daniel. "Tito kémei vagy Sztálin ügynökei?" PONTES 7 (December 22, 2024): 111–24. https://doi.org/10.15170/pontes.2024.07.01.05.

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Josip Broz Tito started as a notorious Stalinist and ended up becoming an opponent of Joseph Stalin. In this respect, the ideological confusion in Yugoslavia during 1948–1949 is significant. The thorough investigations conducted by Security services and Prosecution over the so called 'anti-Tito refugees`' also included Romania, as well as the communist countries bordering Yugoslavia: Albania, Bulgaria and Hungary. The refugees were sent to special colonies, made far from the common border in places where they were offered a job, the chance to resume their education, as well as civic and cultur
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Costăchescu, Adriana. "Les soviétismes en roumain et dans les langues romanes." Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie 134, no. 1 (2018): 219–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zrp-2018-0009.

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AbstractThe article focusses on the fate of Sovietisms in modern Romanian, i.e. the situation of words or phrases borrowed from Russian in the period of Soviet control over Eastern Europe (1945–1989). The borrowings reflect relevant concepts of Soviet-Communist economics, culture, politics and propaganda. Romanian received the largest number of Sovietisms of all Romance languages, mainly because of its close political relationship with the URSS. The use of terms which implicated a critical attitude towards the Soviet-Communist dictatorship (samizdat ‘samizdat’, aparatcic ‘apparatchik’, gulag ‘
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Kukobat, Ilija, and Nemanja Mitrović. "Flight to the Eastern side of the iron curtain: Aviators defecting from Yugoslavia to Romania 1948-1951." Vojno-istorijski glasnik, no. 2 (2024): 111–26. https://doi.org/10.5937/vig2402111k.

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In the first years after the Second World War, Socialist Yugoslavia was a close ally of the Soviet Union. However, increasing differences between the leaderships of the two countries led to an end of such cooperation and open hostilities, symbolised by the Resolution of the Cominform, published in 1948. Some Yugoslav communists supported the Soviet course, which turned them into enemies of the Yugoslav state and the Communist Party. Some of them decided to escape the country. Among them were some aviators, who had the best chance of escaping by using aircraft. Four confirmed cases of defection
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VIZIREANU, DANIELA. "Political Hegemony Over the Public Intellectual in Communist Romania: Monica Lovinescu and Her Misrepresented Portrayal in the Print Press." Synthesis 1-2, no. 1-2 (2023): 94–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.59277/synthe.2023.1-2.94.

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● In the last decades of the Romanian communist regime, a few leading propaganda newspapers and publications such as Luceafărul and Săptămîna violently targeted Monica Lovinescu. This article aims to briefly explore several texts written against her by nationalist supporters of the regime between 1979 and 1989. For example, Artur Silvestri and Eugen Barbu wrote a tremendous number of articles against Monica Lovinescu, brought together in the series “Pseudo-culture on Short Waves” and “The Strategies and Tactics of Radio Free Europe”. Also, various articles from Romanian newspapers would become
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Bălănescu, Flori. "Cornel Chiriac (1942-1975)." ARHIVELE TOTALITARISMULUI 31, no. 3-4 (2024): 234–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.61232/at.2023.3-4.15.

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Romanian journalist, radio producer, record producer and jazz drummer, Cornel Chiriac (1942–1975) was born in Bessarabia. He graduated from the University of Bucharest's Faculty of English Language. Cornel produced for Radio România the most popular music show of the 1960s – METRONOM. After Invasion of Czechoslovakia he played a ballad which relates how five small wolves and a bigger one attacked a sheepfold. Later put on The Beatles' Back in the USSR. He was discovered by Radio Free Europe director Noel Bernard in the Traiskirchen refugee camp and continued his activity in Munich, in RFE's Ro
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Árvay, Erzsébet. "Diaspora Engagement and International Relations in the Cold War." Carnival XXII, no. 1 (2023): 37–63. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10886674.

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In the last two decades, a growing number of studies attempted to incorporate diasporas and diasporic activities into the literature of International Relations. The need for incorporation arose seemingly in parallel with the increasing body of literature on diasporas, which stems from the proliferation of diaspora policies. This paper aims to add a historical perspective to the discussion by reviewing the diaspora engagement policies of the Hungarian People’s Republic in the context of Soviet bloc states during the Cold War. The study examines the archival sources of Radio Free Europe to
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Cesereanu, Ruxandra. "Dystopias and Allegories about Communist Romania." Caietele Echinox 46 (June 1, 2024): 267–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.24193/cechinox.2024.46.20.

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This study outlines a typology of dystopias and narrative allegories about Communist Romania, discussing three famous novels: The Black Church by A. E. Baconsky, The Second Messenger by Bujor Nedelcovici, and Farewell, Europe! by Ion D. Sîrbu. The three novels were prohibited from being published during the Communist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu and became drawer manuscripts, seeing the light of print only after the fall of Communism, in 1990, 1991, and 1992-1993. Baconsky’s novel circulated in samizdat (between 1976-1977) and was made into a series by the Munich-based Radio Free Europe, which
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ARDELEANU, Oana. "Construction of favorable national identity through political discourse." Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Brașov, Series IV: Philology. Cultural Studies 13 (62), Special Issue (2020): 7–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.31926/but.pcs.2020.62.13.3.1.

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"The aim of the present paper is to uncover how the use of language by the Romanian former king, Michael I, in his political speeches helps to construct a favourable national identity on the basis of a collection of discourses. The implications for the concept of national identity were discovered using a thematic analysis on five New Year’s Eve messages of the Romanian former king, broadcasted from 1960 to 1989, via the radio channels Free Europe and The Voice of America, the Romanian editions. The choice of the political figure was motivated by the fact that the former king impersonates the A
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Ritivoi, Andreea Deciu. "Surviving on Soy Salami: Dissidents, Exiles, Prisoners, and the Rhetoric of Affect in Postcommunist Romania." Journal of Romanian Studies 4, no. 2 (2022): 165–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/romanian.2022.12.

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After decades of being seen, or rather heard, through Radio Free Europe as moral and political authorities preserving Romania’s values and hopes from abroad, exiles of the Cold War had a disappointing political career in the postcommunist transitional society. The main figures hailing on behalf of historic pollical parties failed to win the election in 1990, and failed to convince the electorate that they could lead them to freedom and democracy. The former dissidents who had lived overseas likewise did not manage to become opinion leaders, at least not compared to local intellectuals, and eve
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Arlauskaitė-Zakšauskienė, Inga. "Analysis of the Myth on Western Aid to Lithuanian Partisans." Genocidas ir rezistencija 1, no. 35 (2024): 109–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.61903/gr.2014.106.

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There were many factors which affected the emergence of the statement on “western aid”: the Soviet propaganda, communist terror, Lithuanian partisans, Western radio stations, Western intelligence services and others. In order to understand how the hope to receive help from the West spread among partisans, the geopolitical and historical space of the time must be assessed from several perspectives – starting from the dynamics of international relations after WWII finishing with the mentality of freedom fighters and the factors that shaped the outlook of partisans as individuals. In the 1940s, f
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Radio Free Europe. Romanian Service"

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Tomek, Prokop. "Československá redakce Radio Free Europe: historie a vliv na československé dějiny." Doctoral thesis, 2012. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-326941.

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The disertation is focused on development and importance of the Czechoslovak desk of the Radio Free Europe in period between 1950 and 1994. This broadcasting have gained in time of strong censorship significant and till now unresearched importance. In February 1948 the Communist party took power in the Czechoslovakia. After that Czech and Slovak democratic politicians had left country to the West. They wanted to break the isolation of people living behind the Iron Curtain and promote restoration of democracy in their homeland. In 1949 was in the USA established the National Committee for Free
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Medek, Petr. "Ulyxes alias Pavel Minařík." Master's thesis, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-298419.

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This dissertation describes the life of Pavel Minarik, a journalist but also secret police agent, who worked at Radio Free Europe in Munich and in several exile organizations. It also provides a brief overview of the situation in Czechoslovakia in the 2nd half of the 20th century, the development of the security apparatus of the country after World War II (focusing on the secret police and intelligence service) and the foundation of Radio Free Europe. The work refers to the studies on the topic, secret police archives, and also memories of the "Munich radio" reporters.
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Books on the topic "Radio Free Europe. Romanian Service"

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interviewer, Crăciun Andrei, ed. Povestea Europei libere: Nicolae Stroescu-Stînișoară răspunde la întrebǎrile jurnalistului Andrei Crăciun. Editura Vremea, 2015.

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Hajdasz, Jolanta. Szczekaczka czyli Rozgłośnia Polska Radia Wolna Europa. Media Rodzina, 2006.

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Jabłoński, Zygmunt. Gabinet figur radiowych. Pogląd, 1985.

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Borzym, Andrzej, and Jeremi Sadowski. Radio Wolna Europa w polityce polskiej i zachodniej: Materiały konferencji naukowej, Warszawa 30 listopada--1 grudnia 2007. Stowarzyszenie Wolnego Słowa, 2009.

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Tatarowski, Konrad W. Literatura i pisarze w programie Rozgłośni Polskiej Radio Wolna Europa. Universitas, 2005.

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Zdzisław, Uberman, ed. ...Veriu tebe, Kilroi. Izd-vo "Progress", 1985.

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Brzezinski, Zbigniew K. Listy 1959-2003. PWN, 2014.

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Dvořáková, Jiřina. Státní bezpečnost v letech 1945-1953: (organizační vývoj zpravodajských a státně bezpečnostních složek). Úřad dokumentace a vyšetřování zločinů komunismu, 2007.

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"Monachijska menazeria": Walka z Radiem Wolna Europa 1950-1989. Instytut Pamieci Narodowej, 2007.

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Wykluczeni: Wychodźstwo, kraj : studia z antropologii emigracji polskiej XX wieku (idee, osobowości, instytucje). Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Radio Free Europe. Romanian Service"

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Potter, Simon J. "The Corporation, 1927–1939." In This is the BBC. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192898524.003.0003.

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This chapter looks at the work of the BBC after it became a Corporation, established by royal charter, in 1927. This change was more than cosmetic: it was a recognition that the BBC was owned by the nation, and answerable to parliament. While free of day-to-day government intervention, it was part of the state and, in practice, close relationships developed between BBC officers and civil servants. It also developed an increasingly symbiotic relationship with the monarchy. The Corporation moved ahead with establishing its national networks and came to offer listeners a choice of two alternative
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