Black-and-white photo of a street protest with smoke, a burning tank, and people carrying flags.
23 Apr 2026

Start of the travelling exhibition
“What is Dissidence?”

In the socialist countries of Central and Eastern Europe, many people stood up against state violence and arbitrariness. As dissidents, they fought for freedom of expression and human rights, speaking out against censorship and the political oppression of dissenting voices. While some remain well known today, others have been forgotten. Many stories have never been told.

But what exactly is dissidence? Is every form of criticism a form of dissidence? Or does it only refer to loud protests, public vigils, and the distribution of banned literature? What about more subtle forms of resistance, such as withdrawing into private life or having conspiratorial conversations at the kitchen table? Nine posters provide insights into protest movements and forms of resistance from the 1960s to the 1980s. They ask us to consider which of these experiences and attitudes continue to challenge and inspire us today, and to reflect on how they connect with our own histories.

The travelling exhibition What is Dissidence? is a cooperation between the Leibniz Center for Literary and Cultural Research (ZfL) in Berlin and the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO) in Leipzig, funded by the Leibniz Lab disruptions and transformations of the Leibniz Association. It will be shown in public spaces in Berlin-Brandenburg and Saxony.

 

The next dates

22 Apr – 23 May 2026
Stadtbibliothek Hennigsdorf
Am Bahndamm 19, 16761 Hennigsdorf
 
25 May – 5 Jul 2026
 
You will find the latest list of exhibition dates at dissidenz.leibniz-gwzo.de, where we also invite you to share your own thoughts and experiences
 
If you would like to host the poster exhibition at your venue, please contact dissidenz@zfl-berlin.org.
 
 
Fig. above: People carry the Czechoslovak national flag past a burning Soviet tank in Prague during the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968. Source: Wikimedia Commons