nostalgia$53813$ - definitie. Wat is nostalgia$53813$
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Wat (wie) is nostalgia$53813$ - definitie

1971 FILM BY HOLLIS FRAMPTON
Hapax Legomena I: Nostalgia; (nostalgia); Nostalgia (Frampton film); (Nostalgia) (1971 film); Hapax Legomena I: (nostalgia)

Communist nostalgia         
  • Ukrainian decommunization policies]] in [[Donetsk]], 2014. The red banner reads, "Our homeland USSR".
NOSTALGIA IN VARIOUS POST-COMMUNIST STATES OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE AND RUSSIA FOR THE PRIOR COMMUNIST STATES
Communism nostalgia; Nostalgia for Communism; Socialist nostalgia
Communist nostalgia, also called communism nostalgia or socialist nostalgia, is the nostalgia in various post-communist states of Central and Eastern Europe and Russia for the prior communist states.Joakim Ekman, Jonas Linde, Communist nostalgia and the consolidation of democracy in Central and Eastern Europe,  Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics 21(3):354-374 · September 2005  Monika Prusik, Maria Lewicka, Nostalgia for Communist Times and Autobiographical Memory: Negative Present or Positive Past?
Nostalgia for the Soviet Union         
  • Ukrainian decommunization policies]] in [[Donetsk]], 2014. The red banner reads, "Our homeland USSR".
  • Abandoned Soviet factory in [[Kyiv]]. The USSR's collapse was accompanied by [[deindustrialization]] and mass unemployment, feeding Soviet nostalgia in the working class.<ref name=Budraitskis/>
  • Advertisement for the 2020 [[Moscow Victory Day Parade]].
  • lt=Izhory station}} on the outskirts of [[Saint Petersburg]].<br/>The sign was added in 2020.
  • Supporters of the Russian Communist Party demonstrate in Moscow, 2012.
  • Communist protesters with a sign portraying an "order of dismissal" for [[Vladimir Putin]] for "betrayal of the national interests", Moscow, 1 May 2012.
  • The Victory Banner and a Z symbol on a Russian military vehicle in [[Kazan]].
  • Victory Banner]] has been flown in many occupied towns and cities in Ukraine.
  • A bus commemorating Victory Day,<br/>[[Saint Petersburg]], 2010. The text reads "Eternal glory to the victors" next to a portrait of [[Joseph Stalin]] and a [[Saint George's ribbon]].
  • Wall advertisement at the "Soviet Times" pub in [[Moscow]]
SOCIAL PHENOMENON
Nostalgia after the USSR; Soviet nostalgia; Nostalgia for the USSR
Nostalgia for the Soviet Union () or Soviet nostalgia is a social phenomenon of nostalgia for the Soviet era (1922–1991), whether for its politics, its society, its culture, its superpower status, or simply its aesthetics. Such nostalgia occurs among people in Russia and other post-Soviet states, as well as among people born in the Soviet Union but long since living abroad, and even among Communists and Soviet sympathizers from elsewhere in the world.
Yugo-nostalgia         
  • T-shirts in Tito's birthplace [[Kumrovec]], Croatia, 2012
  • Tito memorabilia on an outdoor market in [[Sarajevo]], Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2009
  • Skopje, Macedonia]], in 2018
  • Map of [[SFR Yugoslavia]]
  • Yugoslav flag on a street in [[Mostar]], Bosnia and Herzegovina, in 2009
NOSTALGIA FOR YUGOSLAVIA
Yugo nostalgia; Yugonostalgia; Yugonostalgy; Jugonostalgija; Jugo-nostalgija; Yugonostalgic; Yugoslav reunification; Yugoslav reunion; Yugoslav nostalgia; YU-nostalgia; Yugonostalgics; Reunification of Yugoslavia
Yugo-nostalgia (Slovene, Macedonian, and , југоносталгија) is a political and cultural phenomenon found among the populations of the former Yugoslavia, in the present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Kosovo, and Slovenia. It refers to an emotional longing for a time past when the splintered states were a part of one country, grief over the war that tore it apart, and a desire to again unite.

Wikipedia

Nostalgia (1971 film)

Nostalgia, styled (nostalgia), is a 1971 American experimental film by artist Hollis Frampton. It is part of his Hapax Legomena series.