English edit

Etymology edit

1971, from Ukrainian самви́дав (samvýdav, samizdat) < сам (sam, self) + ви́дання (výdannja, publication). Compare samizdat < Russian самизда́т (samizdát).

Noun edit

samvydav (usually uncountable, plural samvydavs)

  1. (chiefly in a Ukrainian context) Samizdat.
    • 1978, Stephan M. Horak, Russia, the USSR, and Eastern Europe: A Bibliographic Guide to English Language Publications, 1964-1974, Littleton, Colo.: Libraries Unlimited, page 325:
      Many of these appeals appeared in Ukrains’kyi visnyk, a samvydav Ukrainian publication, and a surprising amount eventually were smuggled out of Ukraine to the West.
    • 1996, Paul Robert Magocsi, A History of Ukraine, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, page 661:
      Although some members of the group changed their writing in response to warnings from the party, others continued to publish in the so-called samvydav, or publishing underground, in which self-published works were illegally produced and distributed.
    • 2007, Serhy Yekelchyk, Ukraine: Birth of a Modern Nation, Oxford University Press, page 165:
      One result was the politicization of samvydav (self-publishing, samizdat in Russian), unofficial literature copied on typewriters or by hand and distributed secretly. At first mostly forbidden literary works, by the mid-1960s Ukrainian samvydav developed into bold political journalism.

Usage notes edit

  • Usually italicized as a foreign term not fully naturalized.

Quotations edit

For quotations using this term, see Citations:samvydav.