
Internacionalizam i KPJ
One copy is available

One copy is available
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The Captive Mind is a book published in France in 1953 by Czesław Miłosz, shortly after he was granted political asylum in Paris due to his conflict with the communist authorities in Poland, which was then under the control of the USSR.
The author of this book describes the fate of the main enemies of the Yugoslav communists in the last stage of the war, as well as their attempts to prevent the consolidation of communist power in Yugoslavia in the first post-war years.
A sequel to his memoir 7000 Days in Siberia, in which he describes his twenty-year imprisonment in Soviet gulags. The book delves into his experiences in the camps, providing additional insights into Steiner's life and reflections on communist ideals.
Memoirs of Agata Oreški (1906-1991), a Croatian revolutionary and the only woman from Yugoslavia to survive Stalin's concentration camps. The book was compiled by her son Vlado Oreški and Milan Nikolić, with a foreword by Slavko Goldstein.