Lost Capital—the Intelligentsia Current
of Underground “Solidarity” in Free Poland
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Publication date: 2008-09-16
Polish Sociological Review 2008;163(3):229-244
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ABSTRACT
This article discusses a study of the present vicissitudes of men and women who were active in
the underground publishing movement in the nineteen-eighties. One of the elements of the underground
“Solidarity” ideology was civic responsibility and social activity. The author wanted to know whether the
one-time conspirators have carried these ideas into free Poland.Hefound that very few former underground
activists now work in public institutions. They are disappointed with the outcomes of the transformation
which, rather than giving them a sense of agency, are convincing them that former members of the
democratic opposition have not been instrumental to the successful development of a new, democratic
state. The one-time activists are also finding it difficult to come to terms with the social costs of the reforms
which they feel they co-authored. Most of them have not ceased to be socially active, however, although
they no longer speak the language of civic involvement. They feel that the values they lived by in the years
of struggle with the communist regime cannot be applied in any way to the political reality of a free country.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Data enclosed in the present paper comes from author’s book Śpiący rycerze. Szeregowi działacze warszawskiego podziemia wydawniczego [Sleeping Knights. Rank-and-File Activists of the Warsaw Underground Publishing Movement]. Warszawa: Stowarzyszenie Wolnego Słowa, 2006.