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Propaganda in the Soviet Union

Propaganda in the Soviet Union was the practice of state-directed communication to promote class conflict, internationalism, the goals of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and the party itself.

"Comrade Lenin Cleanses Earth of Filth" by Viktor Deni, November 1920
Polonophobic Soviet propaganda poster, 1920.

The main Soviet censorship body, Glavlit, was employed not only to eliminate any undesirable printed materials but also "to ensure that the correct ideological spin was put on every published item."[1] Under Stalinism, deviation from the dictates of official propaganda was punished by execution and labor camps.[citation needed] Afterwards, such punitive measures were replaced by punitive psychiatry, prison, denial of work, and loss of citizenship. "Today a man only talks freely to his wife – at night, with the blankets pulled over his head," the writer Isaac Babel privately told a trusted friend.[2]

Theory of propaganda

According to historian Peter Kenez, "the Russian socialists have contributed nothing to the theoretical discussion of the techniques of mass persuasion. ... The Bolsheviks never looked for and did not find devilishly clever methods to influence people's minds, to brainwash them." Kenez says this lack of interest "followed from their notion of propaganda. They thought of propaganda as part of education."[3] In a study published in 1958, business administration professor Raymond Bauer concluded: "Ironically, psychology and the other social sciences have been employed least in the Soviet Union for precisely those purposes for which Americans popularly think psychology would be used in a totalitarian state—political propaganda and the control of human behavior."[4]

Media

Schools and youth organizations

 
Young Pioneers, with their slogan: "Prepare to fight for the cause of the Communist Party"

An important goal of Soviet propaganda was to create a New Soviet man. Schools and Communist youth organizations such as the Young Pioneers and Komsomol served to remove children from the "petit-bourgeois" family and indoctrinate the next generation into the "collective way of life". The idea that the upbringing of children was the concern of their parents was explicitly rejected.[5] One schooling theorist stated:

We must make the young into a generation of Communists. Children, like soft wax, are very malleable and they should be moulded into good Communists... We must rescue children from the harmful influence of the family... We must nationalize them. From the earliest days of their little lives, they must find themselves under the beneficent influence of Communist schools... To oblige the mother to give her child to the Soviet state – that is our task.[6]

Those born after the Russian Revolution were explicitly told that they were to build a utopia of brotherhood and justice, and to not be like their parents, but completely Red.[7] "Lenin's corners", "political shrines for the display of propaganda about the god-like founder of the Soviet state", were established in all schools.[6] Schools conducted marches, songs, and pledges of allegiance to Soviet leadership. One of the purposes was to instill in children the idea that they are involved in the world revolution, which is more important than any family ties. Pavlik Morozov, who denounced his father to the secret police NKVD, was promoted as a great positive example.[6]

Teachers in economic and social sciences were particularly responsible for inculcating "unshakable" Marxist–Leninist views.[8] All teachers were prone to strictly follow the plan for educating children approved by the top for reasons of safety, which could cause serious problems dealing with social events that, having just happened, were not included in the plan.[9] Children of "socially alien" elements were often the target of abuse or expelled, in the name of class struggle.[10] Early in the regime, many teachers were drawn into Soviet plans for schooling because of a passion for literacy and numeracy, which the Soviets were attempting to spread.[11]

The Young Pioneers were an important factor in the indoctrination of children.[12] They were taught to be truthful and uncompromising and to fight the enemies of socialism.[13] By the 1930s, this indoctrination completely dominated the Young Pioneers.[14]

Radio

The radio was put to good use, especially to reach the illiterate; radio receivers were put in communal locations, where the peasants would have to come to hear the news, such as changes to rationing, and received propaganda broadcasts with it; some of these locations were also used for posters.[15]

During World War II, radio was used to propagandize Germany; German POWs would be brought on to speak and assure their relatives they were alive, with propaganda being inserted between the announcement that a soldier would speak and when he actually did, in the time allowed for his family to gather.[16]

Posters

 
"To have more, we must produce more. To produce more, we must know more"

Wall posters were widely used in the early days, often depicting the Red Army's triumphs for the benefit of the illiterate.[15] Throughout the 1920s, this was continued.[17]

This continued in World War II, still for the benefit of the less literate, with bold, simple designs.[18]

Cinema

Films were heavily propagandist, although they were pioneers in the documentary field (Roman Karmen, Dziga Vertov).[15] When war appeared inevitable, dramas, such as Alexander Nevsky (1938) were written to prepare the population; these were withdrawn after the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, but returned to circulation after the war began.[19]

Films were shown in theaters and from propaganda trains.[20] During the war newsreels were shown in subway stations so that the poor were not excluded by an inability to pay.[21] Films were also shot with stories of partisan activity, and of the suffering inflicted by the Nazis, such as Girl No. 217, depicting a Russian girl enslaved by an inhuman German family.[21]

Because film needs an industrial base, propaganda also made much of the output of film.[22][failed verification]

Propaganda train

An institution during World War II was the propaganda train, fitted with presses and portable cinemas, staffed with lecturers.[21] In the Civil War the Soviets sent out both "agitation trains" (Russian: агитпоезд) and "agitation steamboats [ru]" (Russian: агитпароход) to inform, entertain, and propagandize.[23][24]

Meetings and lectures

Meetings with speakers were also used. Despite their dullness, many people found they created solidarity, and made them feel important and that they were being kept up to date on news.[25]

Lectures were habitually used to instruct in the proper way of every corner of life.[26]

Joseph Stalin's lectures on Leninism were instrumental in establishing that the Party was the cornerstone of the October Revolution, a policy Lenin acted on but did not write of theoretically.[27]

Art

 
Worker and Kolkhoz Woman commemorated in a stamp

Art, whether literature, visual art, or performing art, was used for the purpose of propaganda.[28] Furthermore, it should show one clear and unambiguous meaning.[29] Long before Stalin imposed complete restraint, a cultural bureaucracy was growing up that regarded art's highest form and purpose as propaganda and began to restrain it to fit that role.[30] Cultural activities were constrained by censorship and a monopoly of cultural institutions.[31]

Imagery frequently drew on heroic realism.[32] The Soviet pavilion for the Paris World Fair was surmounted by Vera Mukhina's a monumental sculpture, Worker and Kolkhoz Woman, in heroic mold.[33] This reflected a call for heroic and romantic art, which reflected the ideal rather than the realistic.[34] Art was filled with health and happiness; paintings teemed with busy industrial and agricultural scenes, and sculptures depicted workers, sentries, and schoolchildren.[35]

In 1937, the Industry of Socialism was intended as a major exhibit of socialist art, but difficulties with pain and the problem of "enemies of the people" appearing in scene required reworking, and sixteen months later, the censors finally approved enough for an exhibition.[36]

Newspapers

In 1917, coming out of underground movements, the Soviets prepared to begin publishing Pravda.[37]

The very first law the Soviets passed on assuming power was to suppress newspapers that opposed them.[31] This had to be repealed and replaced with a milder measure,[38] but by 1918, Lenin had liquidated the independent press, including journals stemming from the 18th century.[39]

From 1930 to 1941, as well as briefly in 1949, the propaganda journal USSR in Construction was circulated. It was published in Russian, French, English, German, and, from 1938, Spanish. The self-proclaimed purpose of the magazine was to "reflect in photography the whole scope and variety of the construction work now going on the USSR".[40] The issues were aimed primarily at an international audience, especially Western left-wing intellectuals and businessmen, and were quite popular during its early publications, with subscribers including George Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells, John Galsworthy, and Romain Rolland.[40]

Illiteracy was regarded as a grave danger, excluding the illiterate from political discussion.[41] In part this was because the people could not be reached by Party journals.[42]

Books

Immediately after the revolution, books were treated with less severity than newspapers, but the nationalizing of printing presses and publishing houses brought them under control.[43] In the Stalinist era, libraries were purged, sometimes so extremely that works by Lenin were removed.[44]

In 1922, the deportation of writers and scholars warned that no deviation was permitted, and pre-publication censorship was reinstated.[45] Due to a lack of Bolshevist authors, many "fellow travelers" were tolerated, but money only came as long as they toed the party line.[46]

During the Stalinist Great Purges, textbooks were often so frequently revised that students had to do without them.[47]

Theatre

The revolutionary theater was used to inspire support for the regime and hatred of its enemies, particularly agitprop theater, noted for its cardboard characters of perfect virtue and complete evil, and its coarse ridicule.[48] Petrushka was a popular figure, often used to defend rich peasants and attack kulaks.[49]

Themes

New man

Many Soviet works depicted the development of a "positive hero" as requiring intellectualism and hard discipline.[50] He was not driven by crude impulses of nature but by conscious self-mastery.[51] The selfless new man was willing to sacrifice not only his life but his self-respect and his sensitivity for the good of others.[52] Equality and sacrifice were touted as the ideal appropriate for the "socialist way of life."[53] Work required exertion and austerity, to show the new man triumphing over his base instincts.[54] Alexey Stakhanov's record-breaking day in mining coal caused him to be set forth as the exemplar of the "new man" and to inspire Stakhanovite movements.[55] The movement inspired much pressure to increase production, on both workers and managers, with critics labeled "wreckers".[56]

This reflected a change from early days, with emphasis on the "little man" among the anonymous labors, to favoring the "hero of labor" in the end of the First Five-Year Plan, with writers explicitly told to produce heroization.[57] While these heroes had to stem from the people, they were set apart by their heroic deeds.[57] Stakhanov himself was well suited for this role, not only a worker but for his good looks like many poster hero and as a family man.[57] The hardships of the First Five-Year Plan were put forth in romanticized accounts.[58] In 1937–38, young heroes who accomplished great feats appeared on the front page of Pravda more often than Stalin himself.[59]

Later, during the purges, claims were made that criminals had been "reforged" by their work on the White Sea/Baltic Canal; salvation through labor appeared in Nikolai Pogodin's The Aristocrats as well as many articles.[60]

This could also be a new woman; Pravda described the Soviet woman as someone who had and could never have existed before.[57] Female Stakhanovites were rarer than male, but a quarter of all trade-union women were designated as "norm-breaking."[33] For the Paris World Fair, Vera Mukhina depicted a monumental sculpture, Worker and Kolkhoz Woman, dressed in work clothing, pressing forward with his hammer and her sickle crossed.[33] Pro-natalist policies encouraging women to have many children were justified by the selfishness inherent in limiting the next generation of "new men."[61] "Mother-heroines" received medals for ten or more children.[62]

Stakhanovites were also used as propaganda figures so heavily that some workers complained that they were skipping work.[63]

The murder of Pavlik Morozov was widely exploited in propaganda to urge on children the duty of informing on even their parents to the new state.[64]

Class enemy

The class enemy was a pervasive feature of Soviet propaganda.[65] With the Civil War, the newly formed army moved to massacre large numbers of kulaks and otherwise promulgate a short lived "reign of terror" to terrify the masses into obedience.[66]

Lenin proclaimed that they were exterminating the bourgeoisie as a class, a position reinforced by the many actions against landlords, well-off peasants, banks, factories, and private shops.[67] Stalin warned, often, that with the struggle to build a socialist society, the class struggle would sharpen as class enemies grew more desperate.[68] During the Stalinist era, all opposition leaders were routinely described as traitors and agents of foreign, imperialist powers.[69]

The Five-Year Plan intensified the class struggle with many attacks on kulaks, and when it was found that many peasant opponents were not rich enough to qualify, they were declared "sub-kulaks."[70] "Kulaks and other class-alien enemies" were often cited as the reason for failures on collective farms.[71] Throughout the First and Second Five-Year Plans, kulaks, wreckers, saboteurs and nationalists were attacked, leading up to the Great Terror.[72] Those who profited from public property were "enemies of the people."[73] By the late 1930s, all "enemies" were lumped together in art as supporters of historical idiocy.[74] Newspapers reported even on the trial of children as young as ten for counterrevolutionary and fascist behavior.[75] During the Holodomor, the starving peasants were denounced as saboteurs, all the more dangerous in that their gentle and inoffensive appearance made them appear innocent; the deaths were only proof that peasants hated socialism so much they were willing to sacrifice their families and risk their lives to fight it.[76]

Stalin, denouncing White counter-revolutionaries, Trotskyists, wreckers, and others, particularly aimed his attention at the Communist old guard.[77] The very improbability of the charges was cited as evidence, since more plausible charges could have been invented.[78]

These enemies were rounded up for the gulags, which propaganda proclaimed to be "corrective labor camps" to such an extent that even people who saw the starvation and slave labor believed the propaganda rather than their eyes.[79]

During World War II, entire nationalities, such as the Volga Germans, were branded traitors.[80]

Stalin himself informed Sergei Eisenstein that his film Ivan the Terrible was flawed because it did not show the necessity of terror in Ivan's persecution of the nobility.[81]

New society

Propaganda can start a large movement or revolution, but only if the masses rally behind one another to make the images produced by propaganda a reality. Good propaganda must instill hope, faith, and certainty. It must bring solidarity among the population. It must stave off demoralization, hopelessness, and resignation.[82]

A common theme was the creation of a new, utopian society, depicted in posters and newsreels, which inspired an enthusiasm in many people.[83] Much propaganda was dedicated to a new community, as exemplified in the use of "comrade."[84] This new society was to be classless.[85] Distinctions were to be based on function, not class, and all possessed the equal duty to work.[86] During the 1930s discussion of the new constitution, one speaker proclaimed that there were, in fact, no classes in the USSR,[87] and newspapers effused over how the dreams of the working class were coming true for the luckiest people in the world.[88] One admission that there were classes – workers, peasants, and working intelligentsia – dismissed it as unimportant, as these new classes had no need to conflict.[89]

Military metaphors were used frequently for this creation, as in 1929, where the collectivization of agriculture was officially termed a "full-scale socialist offensive on all fronts."[90] The Second Five-Year Plan saw a slowdown of the Socialist Offensive, this against a propaganda background of trumpeting the USSR's triumphs on "the battlefield of building socialism."[91]

In Stalinist times, this was often portrayed as a "great family", with Stalin as the great father.[90]

Happiness was mandatory; in a novel where a horse was described as moving "slowly", the censor objected, asking why it was not moving speedily, being happy like the rest of the collective farm workers.[92]

Kohlkhoznye Rebiata published bombastic reports from the collective farms of their children.[93] When hot breakfasts were provided for schoolchildren, particularly in city schools, the program was announced with great fanfare.[93]

Since communist society was the highest and most progressive form of society, it was ethically superior to all others, and "moral" and "immoral" were determined by whether things helped or hindered its development.[94] Tsarist law was overtly abolished, and while judges could use it, they were to be guided by "revolutionary consciousness".[95] Under the pressure of the need for law, more and more was implemented; Stalin justified this in propaganda as the law would "wither away" best when its authority was raised to the highest, through its contradictions.[96]

When the draft of the new constitution led people to believe that private property would be returned and that workers could leave collective farms, speakers were sent out to "clarify" the matter.[97]

Production

Stalin bluntly declared the Bolshevists must close the Tsar-induced fifty- or a hundred-year gap with Western countries in ten years, or "socialism would be destroyed".[98] In support of the Five-Year Plan, he declared being an industrial laggard had caused Russia's historical defeats.[99] Newspapers reported overproduction of quotas, even though many had not occurred, and where they did, the goods were often shoddy.[100]

 
A stamp featuring Pimenov's "Wedding on a Tomorrow Street"

During the 1930s, the development of the USSR was just about the only theme of art, literature and film.[101] The heroes of Arctic exploration were glorified.[101] The twentieth anniversary of the October Revolution was honored with a five volume work glorifying the accomplishments of socialism and (in the last volume) "scientifically based fantasies" of the future, raising such questions as whether the whole world or only Europe would be socialist in twenty years.[102]

Even while a majority of the population was still rural, the USSR was proclaimed "a mighty industrial power."[103] USSR in Construction glorified the Moscow-Volga Canal, with only the briefest mention of the slave labor that had built it.[104]

In 1939, a rationing plan was considered but not implemented because it would undermine the propaganda of improving care for the people, whose lives grew better and more cheerful every year.[105]

During World War II, the slogans were altered from overcoming backwardness to overcoming the "fascist beast" but continued focus on production.[106] The slogan proclaimed "Everything for the Front!"[107] Teams of Young Communists were used as shocktroops to shame workers into higher production as well as spread socialist propaganda.[108]

In the 1950s, Khrushchev repeatedly boasted that the USSR would soon surpass the West in material well-being.[109] Other Soviet officials agreed that the USSR would soon show its superiority because capitalism was like a dead herring – shining as it rotted.[110]

Subsequently, the USSR was referred to as "developed socialism."[111]

Mass movement

This led to a great emphasis on education.[112]

The first post-mortem attack on Stalin was the publication of articles in Pravda proclaiming that the masses made history and the error of a "cult of the individual."[113]

Peace-loving

A common motif in propaganda was that the Soviet Union was peace-loving.[114]

Many warnings were made of the necessity of keeping out of any imperialistic war, as the breakdown of capitalism would make capitalist countries more desperate.[115]

The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was presented as a peace measure.[116]

Internationalism

Even before the Bolshevists seized power, Lenin proclaimed in speeches that the Revolution was the vanguard of a worldwide revolution, both international and socialist.[117] The workers were informed they were the vanguard of world socialism; the slogan "Workers of the world, unite!" was constantly repeated.[118][119]

Lenin founded the organization Comintern to propagate Communism internationally.[120] Stalin proceeded to use it to promote Communism throughout the world for the benefit of the USSR.[121] When this topic was a difficulty dealing with the Allies in World War II, Comintern was dissolved.[120] Similarly, "The Internationale" was dropped as the national anthem in favor of the "Hymn of the Soviet Union".[122]

Japanese prisoners of war were intensively propagandized before their release in 1949, to act as Soviet agents.[123]

Personality cult

While Lenin was uncomfortable with the personality cult that sprung up about him, the party exploited it during the Russian Civil War and officially enshrined it after his death.[124] As early as 1918, a biography of Lenin was written, and busts were produced.[125] With his death, his embalmed body was displayed (to imitate beliefs that the bodies of saints did not decay), and picture books of his life were produced in mass quantities.[126]

Stalin presented himself as a simple man of the people, but distinct from everyday politics by his unique role as leader.[127] His clothing was carefully selected to cement this image.[128] Propaganda presented him as Lenin's heir, exaggerating their relationship, until the Stalin cult drained out the Lenin cult – an effect shown in posters, where at first Lenin would be the dominating figure over Stalin, but as time went on became first only equal, and then smaller and more ghostly, until he was reduced to the byline on the book Stalin was depicted reading.[129] This occurred despite the historical accounts describing Stalin as insignificant, or even a "gray blur", in the early Revolution.[130] From the late 1920s until it was debunked in the 1960s, he was presented as the chief military leader of the civil war.[131] Stalingrad was renamed for him on the claim that he had single-handedly, and against orders, saved it in the civil war.[132]

He often figured as the great father of the "great family" that was the new Soviet Union.[90] Regulations on how exactly to portray Stalin's image and write of his life were carefully promulgated.[133] Inconvenient facts, such as his having wanted to cooperate with the Tsarist government on his return for exile, were purged from his biography.[134]

His work for the Soviet Union was praised in paeans to the "light in the Kremlin window."[54] Marx, Engels, Lenin, and above all Stalin appeared frequently in art.[32]

Discussions of the proposed constitution in the 1930s included effusive thanks to "Comrade Stalin."[88] Engineering projects such as canals were described as having been decreed personally by Stalin.[135] Young Pioneers were enjoined to struggle for "the cause of Lenin and Stalin".[12] During the purges, he increased his appearances in public, having his photograph taken with children, airmen, and Stakhanovites, being hailed as the source of the "happy life," and according to Pravda, riding the subway with common workers.[136]

The propaganda was effectual.[137] Many young people hard at work at construction idolized Stalin.[128] Many people chose to believe that the charges made at the purges were true rather than believing that Stalin had betrayed the revolution.[137]

During World War II, this personality cult was certainly instrumental in inspiring a deep level of commitment from the masses of the Soviet Union, whether on the battlefield or in industrial production.[138] Stalin made a fleeting visit to the front so that propagandists could claim that he had risked his life with the frontline soldiers.[139] The cult was, however, toned down until approaching victory was near.[140] As it became clear that the Soviet Union would eventually win the war, Stalin ensured that propaganda always mentioned his leadership of the war; the victorious generals were sidelined and never allowed to develop into political rivals.

Soon after his death, attacks, first veiled and then open, were made on the "cult of the individual" arguing that history was made by the masses.[113]

Nikita Khrushchev, though leading the attacks on the cult, nevertheless sought out publicity, and his photograph frequently appeared in the newspapers.[141]

Trotsky

As Stalin drew power to himself, Leon Trotsky was pictured in an anti-personality cult. It began with the assertion that he had not joined the Bolshevists until late, after the planning of the October Revolution was done.[142]

Propaganda of extermination

Some historians believe that an important goal of Soviet propaganda was "to justify political repressions of entire social groups which Marxism considered antagonistic to the class of proletariat",[143][failed verification] as in decossackization or dekulakization campaigns.[2][6] Richard Pipes wrote: "a major purpose of Soviet propaganda was arousing violent political emotions against the regime's enemies."[144]

The most effective means to achieve this objective "was the denial of the victim's humanity through the process of dehumanization", "the reduction of real or imaginary enemy to a zoological state".[145] In particular, Vladimir Lenin called to exterminate enemies "as harmful insects", "lice" and "bloodsuckers".[143]: 750 

According to writer and propagandist Maksim Gorky,

Class hatred should be cultivated by an organic revulsion as far as the enemy is concerned. Enemies must be seen as inferior. I believe quite profoundly that the enemy is our inferior, and is a degenerate not only in the physical plane but also in the moral sense.[143]

According to The Black Book of Communism, an example of demonization of the enemy were speeches by state procurator Andrey Vyshinsky during Stalin's show trials. He said about the suspects:[146][failed verification]

Shoot these rabid dogs. Death to this gang who hide their ferocious teeth, their eagle claws, from the people! Down with that vulture Trotsky, from whose mouth a bloody venom drips, putrefying the great ideals of Marxism!... Down with these abject animals! Let's put an end once and for all to these miserable hybrids of foxes and pigs, these stinking corpses! Let's exterminate the mad dogs of capitalism, who want to tear to pieces the flower of our new Soviet nation! Let's push the bestial hatred they bear our leaders back down their own throats!

Anti-religious

Early in the revolution, atheistic propaganda was pushed in an attempt to obliterate religion.[19] Regarding religion more as a class enemy, a cause of hate, than a contender for people's minds, the government abolished the prerogatives of the Russian Orthodox Church and targeted them with ridicule.[147] This included lurid anti-religious processions and newspaper articles that backfired badly, shocking the deeply religious population.[148] It was stopped and replaced by lectures and other more intellectual methods.[114] The Society of the Godless organized for such purposes, and the magazines Bezbozhnik (The Godless) and The Godless in the Workplace promulgated atheistic propaganda.[149] Atheistic education was regarded as a central task of Soviet schools.[150] The attempt to liquidate illiteracy was hindered by attempts to combine it with atheistic education, which caused peasants to stay away and which was eventually reduced.[151]

In 1929, all forms of religious education were banned as religious propaganda, and the right to anti-religious propaganda was explicitly affirmed, whereupon the League of the Godless became the League of the Militant Godless.[152]

A "Godless Five-Year Plan" was proclaimed, purportedly at the instigation of the masses.[153] Christian virtues such as humility and meekness were ridiculed in the press, with self-discipline, loyalty to the party, confidence in the future, and hatred of class enemies being recommended instead.[154] Anti-religious propaganda in Russia led to a reduction in the public demonstrations of religion.[155]

Much anti-religious efforts were dedicated to promoting science in its place.[156] In the debunking of a miracle – a Madonna weeping tears of blood, which was shown to be rust contaminating water by pouring multicolored waters into the statue – was offered to the watching peasants as proof of science, resulting in the crowd killing two of the scientists.[157]

They also tried to overthrow the evangelical image of Jesus. The literature of the USSR in the 1920s, following the tradition of the demythologization of Jesus, created in the works David Strauss, Ernest Renan, Friedrich Nietzsche and Charles Binet-Sanglé, put forward two main themes – Jesus' mental illness and his deception. It was only at the turn of the 1920s and 1930s that the Soviet Union's propaganda won the mythological option, namely the denial of the existence of Jesus.[158]

A "Living Church" movement despised Russian Orthodoxy's hierarchy and preached that socialism was the modern form of Christianity; Trotsky urged their encouragement to split Orthodoxy.[159]

During World War II, this effort was rolled back; Pravda capitalized the word "God" for the first time, as religious attendance was actually encouraged.[160] Much of this was for foreign consumption, where it was widely disbelieved, with President Franklin D. Roosevelt condemning both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as atheistic regimes which did not permit freedom of conscience.[161] This rollback may have occurred due to the ineffectiveness of the Soviets' anti-religious effort.[155]

Anti-intellectualism

Between campaigns against bourgeois culture and making the ideology of the Socialist Offensive intelligible to the masses with cliches and stereotypes, an anti-intellectual tone grew in propaganda.[154] Soviet leaders posed as common people, lacking interest in such matters as fine art and ballet, even as they selectively chose from working class culture.[162]

Plutocracies

In the 1920s, much Soviet propaganda for the outside world was aimed at capitalist countries as plutocracies, and claiming that they intended to destroy the Soviet Union as the workers' paradise.[114] Capitalism, being responsible for the ills of the world, therefore was fundamentally immoral.[163]

Fascism was presented as a terroristic outburst of finance capital, and drawing from the petit bourgeoisie, and the middling peasants, equivalent to kulaks, who were the losers in the historical process.[164]

During the early stages of World War II, it was overtly presented as a war between capitalists, which would weaken them and allow Communist triumph as long as the Soviet Union wisely stayed out.[165] Communist parties over the world were instructed to oppose the war as a clash between capitalist states.[166]

After World War II, the United States of America was presented as a bastion of imperial oppression, with which non-violent competition would take place, as capitalism was in its last stages.[167]

Anti-Tsarist

Campaigns against the society of Imperial Russia continued well into the Soviet Union's history. One speaker recounted how men had had to serve for twenty-five years in the imperial army, to be heckled by an audience member that it did not matter, since they had had food and clothing.[168]

Children were informed that the "accursed past" had been left far behind them, they could become completely "Red".[7]

Anti-Polish

 
Soviet soldier freeing Ukrainian peasants from Polish lordship, 1939. Note the Poles were characterised as mustached tormentors in jackboots
 
Red Army soldier grabs the knife in the hand of an enemy dwarf in a Polish uniform, forcing the knife to drop. By Kriukov, Soviet Union, 1939, Poster collection, Hoover Archives

The Soviet press showed little favor towards its neighboring states. Poland was a subject of this approach from the very beginning. In general, the Soviet press portrayed Poland as a fascist state, that belonged to the same club as Germany and Italy.[169]

Anti-Polish propaganda was heavily used in the Polish-Soviet War, when the Bolsheviks sought to subjugate that newly independent nation, in 1920 as well as during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland and subsequent annexation of Eastern Poland 1939–1941.[170] (see Fig 1)

Poland's capitalist government and its chief of state, Marshal Józef Piłsudski, were fierce anti-communists; all parties or groups affiliated with Communist activities were banned and its members sent to Bereza Kartuska concentration camp in eastern Poland. This potentially fueled Soviet propaganda against the Polish state and vice versa. The posters often featured capitalist mustached Poles dressed as lords, barons, nobles or generals holding a whip over enslaved Ukrainians and Belarusians, which were a minority in Poland at the time.

The Soviet Union perpetrated multiple atrocities against the Polish people, most notably the Katyn massacre of military officers and intelligentsia in 1940.[171]

Spanish war

Many Soviet and Communist writers and artists participated in the Spanish Civil War (Mikhail Koltsov, Ilya Ehrenburg) or supported the Republicans. Popular revolutionary poem Grenada by Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov was published in 1926.

World War II

Pre-war anti-Nazi propaganda

Professor Mamlock and The Oppenheim Family were released in 1938 and 1939 respectively.

Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact

In the face of massive Soviet bewilderment, the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was defended by speaker in Gorky Park.[172] Molotov defended it in an article in Pravda proclaiming that it was a treaty between states, not systems.[172] Stalin himself devised diagrams to show that Neville Chamberlain had wanted to pit the USSR against Nazi Germany, but Comrade Stalin had wisely pit Great Britain against Nazi Germany.[172]

For the duration of the pact, propagandists highly praised Germans.[173] Anti-German or anti-Nazi propaganda like Professor Mamlock were banned.

Anti-German

After the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, Stalin himself declared in a 1941 broadcast that Germany waged war to exterminate the peoples of the USSR.[174] Propaganda published in Pravda denounced all Germans as killers, bloodsuckers, and cannibals, and much play was made of atrocity claims.[175] Hatred was actively and overtly encouraged.[160] They were told that the Germans took no prisoners.[176] Partisans were encouraged to see themselves as avengers.[177] Ilya Ehrenburg was a prominent propaganda writer.

Many anti-German films in the Nazi era revolved about the persecution of Jews in Germany, such as Professor Mamlock (1938) and The Oppenheim Family.[114] Girl No. 217 depicted the horrors inflicted on Soviet POWs, especially the enslavement of the main character Tanya to an inhuman German family,[178] reflecting the harsh treatment of OST-Arbeiter in Nazi Germany.

Despite their own treatment of religion, a revival of Orthodoxy was permitted during World War II to demonize Nazism as the sole enemy of religion.[179]

Vasily Grossman and Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov were war correspondents of the Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star).

Germany vs. Hitlerites

Soviet propaganda to Germans during World War II was at pains to distinguish between the ordinary Germans and their leaders, the Hitlerites (Nazis), and declaring they had no quarrel with the people.[180] The only way to discover if a German soldier had fallen alive into Soviet hands was to listen; the radio would announce that a certain prisoner would speak, then give some time for his family to gather and listen, and fill it with propaganda.[16] A National Committee for 'Free Germany' was founded in Soviet prisoner-of-war camps in an attempt to foment an uprising in Germany.[181]

Anti-fascism

 
British and Soviet servicemen over body of swastikaed dragon

Anti-fascism was commonly used in propaganda aimed outside the USSR during the 1930s, particularly to draw people into front organizations.[182] The Spanish Civil War was, in particular, used to quash dissent among European communist parties and reports of Stalin's growing totalitarianism.[183]

Patriotism/Nationalism

In face of the threat of Nazi Germany, the international claims of communism were played down, and people were recruited to help defend the country on patriotic motives.[116] The presence of a real enemy was used to inspire action and production in face of the threat to the Father Soviet Union, or Mother Russia.[184] All Soviet citizens were called on to fight, and soldiers who surrendered had failed in their duty.[185] To prevent retreats from Stalingrad, soldiers were urged to fight for the soil.[186] [187] All Soviet citizens were called on to fight, and soldiers who surrendered had failed in their duty.[188] To prevent retreats from Stalingrad, soldiers were urged to fight for the soil.[189]

Russian history was pressed into providing a heroic past and patriotic symbols, although selectively, for instance praising men as state builders.[190] Alexander Nevsky made a central theme the importance of the common people in saving Russia while nobles and merchants did nothing, a motif that was heavily employed.[191] Still, the figures selected had no socialist connection.[160] Artists and writers were permitted more freedom, as long as they did not criticize Marxism directly and contained patriotic themes.[192] It was termed the "Great Patriotic War" and stories presented it as a fight of ordinary people's heroism.[193]

While the term motherland was used, it was used to mean the Soviet Union, although primarily Russian national heroes were used to inspire the soldiers.[194] Appeals were also made that the home of other nationalities was the home of their own.[195]

Many Soviet citizens found treatment of soldiers who fell into enemy hands as "traitors to the Motherland" as suitable for their own grim determination, and "not a step back" was supposed to inspire soldiers to fight with self-sacrifice and heroism. However, this was in fact realized via NKVD-led barrier troops that shot retreating soldiers in the back.[196][193]

This continued after the war in a campaign to remove supposed "anti-patriotic elements".[197]

In the 1960s, reviving memories of the Great Patriotic War was used to bolster support for the regime, with all accounts to carefully censored to prevent accounts of Stalin's early incompetence, the defeats, and the heavy cost.[198]

Utopia and space

Throughout the history of the Soviet Union, the concept of a Socialist Utopia was heavily proselytized by the Soviet government. Under the Khrushchev administration, this idea of a Soviet utopia was worked heavily into the concept of space travel and spreading across the world.[199] The accomplishments in space were closely tied to a sense of utopia and the idea that communism was superior to other forms of government. In a press release after Sputnik's launch the Soviet Union states that "...our contemporaries will witness how the freed and conscientious labour of the people of the new socialist society makes the most daring dreams of mankind a reality."[200] The concept of success in science and space exploration were closely tied to the concept of a new socialist society and the utopia that would be created in that society.

Soviet propaganda abroad

 
Residents of a town in Eastern Poland (now Western Belarus) assembled to greet the arrival of the Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939. The Russian text reads "Long Live the great theory of Marx, Engels, Lenin-Stalin". Such welcomings were organized by the activists of the Communist Party of West Belarus affiliated with the Polish Communist Party, delegalized in Poland by 1938.[201]
 
World War II propaganda leaflet dropped from a Soviet airplane on Finnish territory, urging Finnish soldiers to surrender

Trotsky and a small group of Communists regarded the Soviet Union as doomed without the spread of the revolution internationally.[202] The victory of Stalin, who regarded the construction of socialism in the Soviet Union as a necessary exemplar to the rest of the world and represented the majority view,[203] did not, however, stop international propaganda.

In the 1980s, the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) estimated that the budget of Soviet propaganda abroad was between $3.5 and $4 billion.[204]

Propaganda abroad was partly conducted by Soviet intelligence agencies. GRU alone spent more than $1 billion for propaganda and peace movements against Vietnam War, which was a "hugely successful campaign and well worth the cost", according to GRU defector Stanislav Lunev.[205] He claimed that "the GRU and the KGB helped to fund just about every antiwar movement and organization in America and abroad".[205]

According to Oleg Kalugin, "the Soviet intelligence was really unparalleled. ... The KGB programs – which would run all sorts of congresses, peace congresses, youth congresses, festivals, women's movements, trade union movements, campaigns against U.S. missiles in Europe, campaigns against neutron weapons, allegations that AIDS ... was invented by the CIA ... all sorts of forgeries and faked material – [were] targeted at politicians, the academic community, at the public at large."[206]

Soviet-run movements pretended to have little or no ties with the USSR, often seen as noncommunist (or allied to such groups), but were controlled by the USSR.[207] Most members and supporters, did not realize that they were instruments of Soviet propaganda.[207][208] The organizations aimed at convincing well-meaning but naive Westerners to support Soviet overt or covert goals.[209] A witness in a US congressional hearing on Soviet cover activity described the goals of such organizations as to "spread Soviet propaganda themes and create false impression of public support for the foreign policies of Soviet Union."[208]

Much of the activity of the Soviet-run peace movements was supervised by the World Peace Council.[207][208] Other important front organizations included the World Federation of Trade Unions, the World Federation of Democratic Youth, and the International Union of Students.[208] Somewhat less important front organizations included: Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Organization, Christian Peace Conference, International Association of Democratic Lawyers, International Federation of Resistance Movements, International Institute for Peace, International Organization of Journalists, Women's International Democratic Federation and World Federation of Scientific Workers.[210] There were also numerous smaller organizations, affiliated with the above fronts.[209][211]

Those organizations received in total more than 100 million dollars from the USSR every year.[207]

Propaganda against the United States and the greater Western world included the following actions:[212]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Ellul, Jacques. Propaganda: The Formation of Men's Attitudes. Trans. Konrad Kellen & Jean Lerner. New York: Knopf, 1965. New York: Random House/ Vintage 1973
  • Fateev, Andrey (1999). Образ врага в советской пропаганде. 1945 - 1954 гг [Image of the enemy in Soviet propaganda. 1945-1954] (in Russian). Moscow: IRH RAS [ru].

External links

  • Soviet World War II Propaganda Posters
  • A digital presentation of several issues of the propaganda journal USSR in Construction by the University of Saskatchewan.

propaganda, soviet, union, practice, state, directed, communication, promote, class, conflict, internationalism, goals, communist, party, soviet, union, party, itself, comrade, lenin, cleanses, earth, filth, viktor, deni, november, 1920, polonophobic, soviet, . Propaganda in the Soviet Union was the practice of state directed communication to promote class conflict internationalism the goals of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the party itself Comrade Lenin Cleanses Earth of Filth by Viktor Deni November 1920 Polonophobic Soviet propaganda poster 1920 The main Soviet censorship body Glavlit was employed not only to eliminate any undesirable printed materials but also to ensure that the correct ideological spin was put on every published item 1 Under Stalinism deviation from the dictates of official propaganda was punished by execution and labor camps citation needed Afterwards such punitive measures were replaced by punitive psychiatry prison denial of work and loss of citizenship Today a man only talks freely to his wife at night with the blankets pulled over his head the writer Isaac Babel privately told a trusted friend 2 Contents 1 Theory of propaganda 2 Media 2 1 Schools and youth organizations 2 2 Radio 2 3 Posters 2 4 Cinema 2 5 Propaganda train 2 6 Meetings and lectures 2 7 Art 2 8 Newspapers 2 9 Books 2 10 Theatre 3 Themes 3 1 New man 3 2 Class enemy 3 3 New society 3 3 1 Production 3 4 Mass movement 3 5 Peace loving 3 6 Internationalism 3 7 Personality cult 3 7 1 Trotsky 3 8 Propaganda of extermination 3 9 Anti religious 3 10 Anti intellectualism 3 11 Plutocracies 3 12 Anti Tsarist 3 13 Anti Polish 3 14 Spanish war 3 15 World War II 3 15 1 Pre war anti Nazi propaganda 3 15 2 Molotov Ribbentrop Pact 3 15 3 Anti German 3 15 4 Germany vs Hitlerites 3 15 5 Anti fascism 3 15 6 Patriotism Nationalism 4 Utopia and space 5 Soviet propaganda abroad 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksTheory of propaganda EditAccording to historian Peter Kenez the Russian socialists have contributed nothing to the theoretical discussion of the techniques of mass persuasion The Bolsheviks never looked for and did not find devilishly clever methods to influence people s minds to brainwash them Kenez says this lack of interest followed from their notion of propaganda They thought of propaganda as part of education 3 In a study published in 1958 business administration professor Raymond Bauer concluded Ironically psychology and the other social sciences have been employed least in the Soviet Union for precisely those purposes for which Americans popularly think psychology would be used in a totalitarian state political propaganda and the control of human behavior 4 Media EditSchools and youth organizations Edit See also Education in the Soviet Union Young Pioneers with their slogan Prepare to fight for the cause of the Communist Party An important goal of Soviet propaganda was to create a New Soviet man Schools and Communist youth organizations such as the Young Pioneers and Komsomol served to remove children from the petit bourgeois family and indoctrinate the next generation into the collective way of life The idea that the upbringing of children was the concern of their parents was explicitly rejected 5 One schooling theorist stated We must make the young into a generation of Communists Children like soft wax are very malleable and they should be moulded into good Communists We must rescue children from the harmful influence of the family We must nationalize them From the earliest days of their little lives they must find themselves under the beneficent influence of Communist schools To oblige the mother to give her child to the Soviet state that is our task 6 Those born after the Russian Revolution were explicitly told that they were to build a utopia of brotherhood and justice and to not be like their parents but completely Red 7 Lenin s corners political shrines for the display of propaganda about the god like founder of the Soviet state were established in all schools 6 Schools conducted marches songs and pledges of allegiance to Soviet leadership One of the purposes was to instill in children the idea that they are involved in the world revolution which is more important than any family ties Pavlik Morozov who denounced his father to the secret police NKVD was promoted as a great positive example 6 Teachers in economic and social sciences were particularly responsible for inculcating unshakable Marxist Leninist views 8 All teachers were prone to strictly follow the plan for educating children approved by the top for reasons of safety which could cause serious problems dealing with social events that having just happened were not included in the plan 9 Children of socially alien elements were often the target of abuse or expelled in the name of class struggle 10 Early in the regime many teachers were drawn into Soviet plans for schooling because of a passion for literacy and numeracy which the Soviets were attempting to spread 11 The Young Pioneers were an important factor in the indoctrination of children 12 They were taught to be truthful and uncompromising and to fight the enemies of socialism 13 By the 1930s this indoctrination completely dominated the Young Pioneers 14 Radio Edit Main article Radio in the Soviet Union The radio was put to good use especially to reach the illiterate radio receivers were put in communal locations where the peasants would have to come to hear the news such as changes to rationing and received propaganda broadcasts with it some of these locations were also used for posters 15 During World War II radio was used to propagandize Germany German POWs would be brought on to speak and assure their relatives they were alive with propaganda being inserted between the announcement that a soldier would speak and when he actually did in the time allowed for his family to gather 16 Posters Edit To have more we must produce more To produce more we must know more Wall posters were widely used in the early days often depicting the Red Army s triumphs for the benefit of the illiterate 15 Throughout the 1920s this was continued 17 This continued in World War II still for the benefit of the less literate with bold simple designs 18 Cinema Edit Main article Cinema of the Soviet Union Films were heavily propagandist although they were pioneers in the documentary field Roman Karmen Dziga Vertov 15 When war appeared inevitable dramas such as Alexander Nevsky 1938 were written to prepare the population these were withdrawn after the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact but returned to circulation after the war began 19 Films were shown in theaters and from propaganda trains 20 During the war newsreels were shown in subway stations so that the poor were not excluded by an inability to pay 21 Films were also shot with stories of partisan activity and of the suffering inflicted by the Nazis such as Girl No 217 depicting a Russian girl enslaved by an inhuman German family 21 Because film needs an industrial base propaganda also made much of the output of film 22 failed verification Propaganda train Edit Main article Agit train An institution during World War II was the propaganda train fitted with presses and portable cinemas staffed with lecturers 21 In the Civil War the Soviets sent out both agitation trains Russian agitpoezd and agitation steamboats ru Russian agitparohod to inform entertain and propagandize 23 24 Meetings and lectures Edit Meetings with speakers were also used Despite their dullness many people found they created solidarity and made them feel important and that they were being kept up to date on news 25 Lectures were habitually used to instruct in the proper way of every corner of life 26 Joseph Stalin s lectures on Leninism were instrumental in establishing that the Party was the cornerstone of the October Revolution a policy Lenin acted on but did not write of theoretically 27 Art Edit Worker and Kolkhoz Woman commemorated in a stamp See also Socialist realism Art whether literature visual art or performing art was used for the purpose of propaganda 28 Furthermore it should show one clear and unambiguous meaning 29 Long before Stalin imposed complete restraint a cultural bureaucracy was growing up that regarded art s highest form and purpose as propaganda and began to restrain it to fit that role 30 Cultural activities were constrained by censorship and a monopoly of cultural institutions 31 Imagery frequently drew on heroic realism 32 The Soviet pavilion for the Paris World Fair was surmounted by Vera Mukhina s a monumental sculpture Worker and Kolkhoz Woman in heroic mold 33 This reflected a call for heroic and romantic art which reflected the ideal rather than the realistic 34 Art was filled with health and happiness paintings teemed with busy industrial and agricultural scenes and sculptures depicted workers sentries and schoolchildren 35 In 1937 the Industry of Socialism was intended as a major exhibit of socialist art but difficulties with pain and the problem of enemies of the people appearing in scene required reworking and sixteen months later the censors finally approved enough for an exhibition 36 Newspapers Edit In 1917 coming out of underground movements the Soviets prepared to begin publishing Pravda 37 The very first law the Soviets passed on assuming power was to suppress newspapers that opposed them 31 This had to be repealed and replaced with a milder measure 38 but by 1918 Lenin had liquidated the independent press including journals stemming from the 18th century 39 From 1930 to 1941 as well as briefly in 1949 the propaganda journal USSR in Construction was circulated It was published in Russian French English German and from 1938 Spanish The self proclaimed purpose of the magazine was to reflect in photography the whole scope and variety of the construction work now going on the USSR 40 The issues were aimed primarily at an international audience especially Western left wing intellectuals and businessmen and were quite popular during its early publications with subscribers including George Bernard Shaw H G Wells John Galsworthy and Romain Rolland 40 Illiteracy was regarded as a grave danger excluding the illiterate from political discussion 41 In part this was because the people could not be reached by Party journals 42 Books Edit Main article Literature in the Soviet Union Immediately after the revolution books were treated with less severity than newspapers but the nationalizing of printing presses and publishing houses brought them under control 43 In the Stalinist era libraries were purged sometimes so extremely that works by Lenin were removed 44 In 1922 the deportation of writers and scholars warned that no deviation was permitted and pre publication censorship was reinstated 45 Due to a lack of Bolshevist authors many fellow travelers were tolerated but money only came as long as they toed the party line 46 During the Stalinist Great Purges textbooks were often so frequently revised that students had to do without them 47 Theatre Edit The revolutionary theater was used to inspire support for the regime and hatred of its enemies particularly agitprop theater noted for its cardboard characters of perfect virtue and complete evil and its coarse ridicule 48 Petrushka was a popular figure often used to defend rich peasants and attack kulaks 49 Themes EditNew man Edit Main article New Soviet Man Many Soviet works depicted the development of a positive hero as requiring intellectualism and hard discipline 50 He was not driven by crude impulses of nature but by conscious self mastery 51 The selfless new man was willing to sacrifice not only his life but his self respect and his sensitivity for the good of others 52 Equality and sacrifice were touted as the ideal appropriate for the socialist way of life 53 Work required exertion and austerity to show the new man triumphing over his base instincts 54 Alexey Stakhanov s record breaking day in mining coal caused him to be set forth as the exemplar of the new man and to inspire Stakhanovite movements 55 The movement inspired much pressure to increase production on both workers and managers with critics labeled wreckers 56 This reflected a change from early days with emphasis on the little man among the anonymous labors to favoring the hero of labor in the end of the First Five Year Plan with writers explicitly told to produce heroization 57 While these heroes had to stem from the people they were set apart by their heroic deeds 57 Stakhanov himself was well suited for this role not only a worker but for his good looks like many poster hero and as a family man 57 The hardships of the First Five Year Plan were put forth in romanticized accounts 58 In 1937 38 young heroes who accomplished great feats appeared on the front page of Pravda more often than Stalin himself 59 Later during the purges claims were made that criminals had been reforged by their work on the White Sea Baltic Canal salvation through labor appeared in Nikolai Pogodin s The Aristocrats as well as many articles 60 This could also be a new woman Pravda described the Soviet woman as someone who had and could never have existed before 57 Female Stakhanovites were rarer than male but a quarter of all trade union women were designated as norm breaking 33 For the Paris World Fair Vera Mukhina depicted a monumental sculpture Worker and Kolkhoz Woman dressed in work clothing pressing forward with his hammer and her sickle crossed 33 Pro natalist policies encouraging women to have many children were justified by the selfishness inherent in limiting the next generation of new men 61 Mother heroines received medals for ten or more children 62 Stakhanovites were also used as propaganda figures so heavily that some workers complained that they were skipping work 63 The murder of Pavlik Morozov was widely exploited in propaganda to urge on children the duty of informing on even their parents to the new state 64 Class enemy Edit See also Enemy of the People The class enemy was a pervasive feature of Soviet propaganda 65 With the Civil War the newly formed army moved to massacre large numbers of kulaks and otherwise promulgate a short lived reign of terror to terrify the masses into obedience 66 Lenin proclaimed that they were exterminating the bourgeoisie as a class a position reinforced by the many actions against landlords well off peasants banks factories and private shops 67 Stalin warned often that with the struggle to build a socialist society the class struggle would sharpen as class enemies grew more desperate 68 During the Stalinist era all opposition leaders were routinely described as traitors and agents of foreign imperialist powers 69 The Five Year Plan intensified the class struggle with many attacks on kulaks and when it was found that many peasant opponents were not rich enough to qualify they were declared sub kulaks 70 Kulaks and other class alien enemies were often cited as the reason for failures on collective farms 71 Throughout the First and Second Five Year Plans kulaks wreckers saboteurs and nationalists were attacked leading up to the Great Terror 72 Those who profited from public property were enemies of the people 73 By the late 1930s all enemies were lumped together in art as supporters of historical idiocy 74 Newspapers reported even on the trial of children as young as ten for counterrevolutionary and fascist behavior 75 During the Holodomor the starving peasants were denounced as saboteurs all the more dangerous in that their gentle and inoffensive appearance made them appear innocent the deaths were only proof that peasants hated socialism so much they were willing to sacrifice their families and risk their lives to fight it 76 Stalin denouncing White counter revolutionaries Trotskyists wreckers and others particularly aimed his attention at the Communist old guard 77 The very improbability of the charges was cited as evidence since more plausible charges could have been invented 78 These enemies were rounded up for the gulags which propaganda proclaimed to be corrective labor camps to such an extent that even people who saw the starvation and slave labor believed the propaganda rather than their eyes 79 During World War II entire nationalities such as the Volga Germans were branded traitors 80 Stalin himself informed Sergei Eisenstein that his film Ivan the Terrible was flawed because it did not show the necessity of terror in Ivan s persecution of the nobility 81 New society Edit Propaganda can start a large movement or revolution but only if the masses rally behind one another to make the images produced by propaganda a reality Good propaganda must instill hope faith and certainty It must bring solidarity among the population It must stave off demoralization hopelessness and resignation 82 A common theme was the creation of a new utopian society depicted in posters and newsreels which inspired an enthusiasm in many people 83 Much propaganda was dedicated to a new community as exemplified in the use of comrade 84 This new society was to be classless 85 Distinctions were to be based on function not class and all possessed the equal duty to work 86 During the 1930s discussion of the new constitution one speaker proclaimed that there were in fact no classes in the USSR 87 and newspapers effused over how the dreams of the working class were coming true for the luckiest people in the world 88 One admission that there were classes workers peasants and working intelligentsia dismissed it as unimportant as these new classes had no need to conflict 89 Military metaphors were used frequently for this creation as in 1929 where the collectivization of agriculture was officially termed a full scale socialist offensive on all fronts 90 The Second Five Year Plan saw a slowdown of the Socialist Offensive this against a propaganda background of trumpeting the USSR s triumphs on the battlefield of building socialism 91 In Stalinist times this was often portrayed as a great family with Stalin as the great father 90 Happiness was mandatory in a novel where a horse was described as moving slowly the censor objected asking why it was not moving speedily being happy like the rest of the collective farm workers 92 Kohlkhoznye Rebiata published bombastic reports from the collective farms of their children 93 When hot breakfasts were provided for schoolchildren particularly in city schools the program was announced with great fanfare 93 Since communist society was the highest and most progressive form of society it was ethically superior to all others and moral and immoral were determined by whether things helped or hindered its development 94 Tsarist law was overtly abolished and while judges could use it they were to be guided by revolutionary consciousness 95 Under the pressure of the need for law more and more was implemented Stalin justified this in propaganda as the law would wither away best when its authority was raised to the highest through its contradictions 96 When the draft of the new constitution led people to believe that private property would be returned and that workers could leave collective farms speakers were sent out to clarify the matter 97 Production Edit Stalin bluntly declared the Bolshevists must close the Tsar induced fifty or a hundred year gap with Western countries in ten years or socialism would be destroyed 98 In support of the Five Year Plan he declared being an industrial laggard had caused Russia s historical defeats 99 Newspapers reported overproduction of quotas even though many had not occurred and where they did the goods were often shoddy 100 A stamp featuring Pimenov s Wedding on a Tomorrow Street During the 1930s the development of the USSR was just about the only theme of art literature and film 101 The heroes of Arctic exploration were glorified 101 The twentieth anniversary of the October Revolution was honored with a five volume work glorifying the accomplishments of socialism and in the last volume scientifically based fantasies of the future raising such questions as whether the whole world or only Europe would be socialist in twenty years 102 Even while a majority of the population was still rural the USSR was proclaimed a mighty industrial power 103 USSR in Construction glorified the Moscow Volga Canal with only the briefest mention of the slave labor that had built it 104 In 1939 a rationing plan was considered but not implemented because it would undermine the propaganda of improving care for the people whose lives grew better and more cheerful every year 105 During World War II the slogans were altered from overcoming backwardness to overcoming the fascist beast but continued focus on production 106 The slogan proclaimed Everything for the Front 107 Teams of Young Communists were used as shocktroops to shame workers into higher production as well as spread socialist propaganda 108 In the 1950s Khrushchev repeatedly boasted that the USSR would soon surpass the West in material well being 109 Other Soviet officials agreed that the USSR would soon show its superiority because capitalism was like a dead herring shining as it rotted 110 Subsequently the USSR was referred to as developed socialism 111 Mass movement Edit This led to a great emphasis on education 112 The first post mortem attack on Stalin was the publication of articles in Pravda proclaiming that the masses made history and the error of a cult of the individual 113 Peace loving Edit A common motif in propaganda was that the Soviet Union was peace loving 114 Many warnings were made of the necessity of keeping out of any imperialistic war as the breakdown of capitalism would make capitalist countries more desperate 115 The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was presented as a peace measure 116 Internationalism Edit Main article Communist International Even before the Bolshevists seized power Lenin proclaimed in speeches that the Revolution was the vanguard of a worldwide revolution both international and socialist 117 The workers were informed they were the vanguard of world socialism the slogan Workers of the world unite was constantly repeated 118 119 Lenin founded the organization Comintern to propagate Communism internationally 120 Stalin proceeded to use it to promote Communism throughout the world for the benefit of the USSR 121 When this topic was a difficulty dealing with the Allies in World War II Comintern was dissolved 120 Similarly The Internationale was dropped as the national anthem in favor of the Hymn of the Soviet Union 122 Japanese prisoners of war were intensively propagandized before their release in 1949 to act as Soviet agents 123 Personality cult Edit Main articles Joseph Stalin s cult of personality Cult of personality and De Leninization While Lenin was uncomfortable with the personality cult that sprung up about him the party exploited it during the Russian Civil War and officially enshrined it after his death 124 As early as 1918 a biography of Lenin was written and busts were produced 125 With his death his embalmed body was displayed to imitate beliefs that the bodies of saints did not decay and picture books of his life were produced in mass quantities 126 Stalin presented himself as a simple man of the people but distinct from everyday politics by his unique role as leader 127 His clothing was carefully selected to cement this image 128 Propaganda presented him as Lenin s heir exaggerating their relationship until the Stalin cult drained out the Lenin cult an effect shown in posters where at first Lenin would be the dominating figure over Stalin but as time went on became first only equal and then smaller and more ghostly until he was reduced to the byline on the book Stalin was depicted reading 129 This occurred despite the historical accounts describing Stalin as insignificant or even a gray blur in the early Revolution 130 From the late 1920s until it was debunked in the 1960s he was presented as the chief military leader of the civil war 131 Stalingrad was renamed for him on the claim that he had single handedly and against orders saved it in the civil war 132 He often figured as the great father of the great family that was the new Soviet Union 90 Regulations on how exactly to portray Stalin s image and write of his life were carefully promulgated 133 Inconvenient facts such as his having wanted to cooperate with the Tsarist government on his return for exile were purged from his biography 134 His work for the Soviet Union was praised in paeans to the light in the Kremlin window 54 Marx Engels Lenin and above all Stalin appeared frequently in art 32 Discussions of the proposed constitution in the 1930s included effusive thanks to Comrade Stalin 88 Engineering projects such as canals were described as having been decreed personally by Stalin 135 Young Pioneers were enjoined to struggle for the cause of Lenin and Stalin 12 During the purges he increased his appearances in public having his photograph taken with children airmen and Stakhanovites being hailed as the source of the happy life and according to Pravda riding the subway with common workers 136 The propaganda was effectual 137 Many young people hard at work at construction idolized Stalin 128 Many people chose to believe that the charges made at the purges were true rather than believing that Stalin had betrayed the revolution 137 During World War II this personality cult was certainly instrumental in inspiring a deep level of commitment from the masses of the Soviet Union whether on the battlefield or in industrial production 138 Stalin made a fleeting visit to the front so that propagandists could claim that he had risked his life with the frontline soldiers 139 The cult was however toned down until approaching victory was near 140 As it became clear that the Soviet Union would eventually win the war Stalin ensured that propaganda always mentioned his leadership of the war the victorious generals were sidelined and never allowed to develop into political rivals Soon after his death attacks first veiled and then open were made on the cult of the individual arguing that history was made by the masses 113 Nikita Khrushchev though leading the attacks on the cult nevertheless sought out publicity and his photograph frequently appeared in the newspapers 141 Trotsky Edit As Stalin drew power to himself Leon Trotsky was pictured in an anti personality cult It began with the assertion that he had not joined the Bolshevists until late after the planning of the October Revolution was done 142 Propaganda of extermination Edit Some historians believe that an important goal of Soviet propaganda was to justify political repressions of entire social groups which Marxism considered antagonistic to the class of proletariat 143 failed verification as in decossackization or dekulakization campaigns 2 6 Richard Pipes wrote a major purpose of Soviet propaganda was arousing violent political emotions against the regime s enemies 144 The most effective means to achieve this objective was the denial of the victim s humanity through the process of dehumanization the reduction of real or imaginary enemy to a zoological state 145 In particular Vladimir Lenin called to exterminate enemies as harmful insects lice and bloodsuckers 143 750 According to writer and propagandist Maksim Gorky Class hatred should be cultivated by an organic revulsion as far as the enemy is concerned Enemies must be seen as inferior I believe quite profoundly that the enemy is our inferior and is a degenerate not only in the physical plane but also in the moral sense 143 According to The Black Book of Communism an example of demonization of the enemy were speeches by state procurator Andrey Vyshinsky during Stalin s show trials He said about the suspects 146 failed verification Shoot these rabid dogs Death to this gang who hide their ferocious teeth their eagle claws from the people Down with that vulture Trotsky from whose mouth a bloody venom drips putrefying the great ideals of Marxism Down with these abject animals Let s put an end once and for all to these miserable hybrids of foxes and pigs these stinking corpses Let s exterminate the mad dogs of capitalism who want to tear to pieces the flower of our new Soviet nation Let s push the bestial hatred they bear our leaders back down their own throats Anti religious Edit Main article Anti religious propaganda in the Soviet Union Early in the revolution atheistic propaganda was pushed in an attempt to obliterate religion 19 Regarding religion more as a class enemy a cause of hate than a contender for people s minds the government abolished the prerogatives of the Russian Orthodox Church and targeted them with ridicule 147 This included lurid anti religious processions and newspaper articles that backfired badly shocking the deeply religious population 148 It was stopped and replaced by lectures and other more intellectual methods 114 The Society of the Godless organized for such purposes and the magazines Bezbozhnik The Godless and The Godless in the Workplace promulgated atheistic propaganda 149 Atheistic education was regarded as a central task of Soviet schools 150 The attempt to liquidate illiteracy was hindered by attempts to combine it with atheistic education which caused peasants to stay away and which was eventually reduced 151 In 1929 all forms of religious education were banned as religious propaganda and the right to anti religious propaganda was explicitly affirmed whereupon the League of the Godless became the League of the Militant Godless 152 A Godless Five Year Plan was proclaimed purportedly at the instigation of the masses 153 Christian virtues such as humility and meekness were ridiculed in the press with self discipline loyalty to the party confidence in the future and hatred of class enemies being recommended instead 154 Anti religious propaganda in Russia led to a reduction in the public demonstrations of religion 155 Much anti religious efforts were dedicated to promoting science in its place 156 In the debunking of a miracle a Madonna weeping tears of blood which was shown to be rust contaminating water by pouring multicolored waters into the statue was offered to the watching peasants as proof of science resulting in the crowd killing two of the scientists 157 They also tried to overthrow the evangelical image of Jesus The literature of the USSR in the 1920s following the tradition of the demythologization of Jesus created in the works David Strauss Ernest Renan Friedrich Nietzsche and Charles Binet Sangle put forward two main themes Jesus mental illness and his deception It was only at the turn of the 1920s and 1930s that the Soviet Union s propaganda won the mythological option namely the denial of the existence of Jesus 158 A Living Church movement despised Russian Orthodoxy s hierarchy and preached that socialism was the modern form of Christianity Trotsky urged their encouragement to split Orthodoxy 159 During World War II this effort was rolled back Pravda capitalized the word God for the first time as religious attendance was actually encouraged 160 Much of this was for foreign consumption where it was widely disbelieved with President Franklin D Roosevelt condemning both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union as atheistic regimes which did not permit freedom of conscience 161 This rollback may have occurred due to the ineffectiveness of the Soviets anti religious effort 155 Anti intellectualism Edit Between campaigns against bourgeois culture and making the ideology of the Socialist Offensive intelligible to the masses with cliches and stereotypes an anti intellectual tone grew in propaganda 154 Soviet leaders posed as common people lacking interest in such matters as fine art and ballet even as they selectively chose from working class culture 162 Plutocracies Edit In the 1920s much Soviet propaganda for the outside world was aimed at capitalist countries as plutocracies and claiming that they intended to destroy the Soviet Union as the workers paradise 114 Capitalism being responsible for the ills of the world therefore was fundamentally immoral 163 Fascism was presented as a terroristic outburst of finance capital and drawing from the petit bourgeoisie and the middling peasants equivalent to kulaks who were the losers in the historical process 164 During the early stages of World War II it was overtly presented as a war between capitalists which would weaken them and allow Communist triumph as long as the Soviet Union wisely stayed out 165 Communist parties over the world were instructed to oppose the war as a clash between capitalist states 166 After World War II the United States of America was presented as a bastion of imperial oppression with which non violent competition would take place as capitalism was in its last stages 167 Anti Tsarist Edit Campaigns against the society of Imperial Russia continued well into the Soviet Union s history One speaker recounted how men had had to serve for twenty five years in the imperial army to be heckled by an audience member that it did not matter since they had had food and clothing 168 Children were informed that the accursed past had been left far behind them they could become completely Red 7 Anti Polish Edit Main article Poland Soviet Union relations Soviet soldier freeing Ukrainian peasants from Polish lordship 1939 Note the Poles were characterised as mustached tormentors in jackboots Red Army soldier grabs the knife in the hand of an enemy dwarf in a Polish uniform forcing the knife to drop By Kriukov Soviet Union 1939 Poster collection Hoover Archives The Soviet press showed little favor towards its neighboring states Poland was a subject of this approach from the very beginning In general the Soviet press portrayed Poland as a fascist state that belonged to the same club as Germany and Italy 169 Anti Polish propaganda was heavily used in the Polish Soviet War when the Bolsheviks sought to subjugate that newly independent nation in 1920 as well as during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland and subsequent annexation of Eastern Poland 1939 1941 170 see Fig 1 Poland s capitalist government and its chief of state Marshal Jozef Pilsudski were fierce anti communists all parties or groups affiliated with Communist activities were banned and its members sent to Bereza Kartuska concentration camp in eastern Poland This potentially fueled Soviet propaganda against the Polish state and vice versa The posters often featured capitalist mustached Poles dressed as lords barons nobles or generals holding a whip over enslaved Ukrainians and Belarusians which were a minority in Poland at the time The Soviet Union perpetrated multiple atrocities against the Polish people most notably the Katyn massacre of military officers and intelligentsia in 1940 171 Spanish war Edit Many Soviet and Communist writers and artists participated in the Spanish Civil War Mikhail Koltsov Ilya Ehrenburg or supported the Republicans Popular revolutionary poem Grenada by Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov was published in 1926 World War II Edit Main article Propaganda in World War II Pre war anti Nazi propaganda Edit Professor Mamlock and The Oppenheim Family were released in 1938 and 1939 respectively Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Edit In the face of massive Soviet bewilderment the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact was defended by speaker in Gorky Park 172 Molotov defended it in an article in Pravda proclaiming that it was a treaty between states not systems 172 Stalin himself devised diagrams to show that Neville Chamberlain had wanted to pit the USSR against Nazi Germany but Comrade Stalin had wisely pit Great Britain against Nazi Germany 172 For the duration of the pact propagandists highly praised Germans 173 Anti German or anti Nazi propaganda like Professor Mamlock were banned Anti German Edit After the beginning of Operation Barbarossa Stalin himself declared in a 1941 broadcast that Germany waged war to exterminate the peoples of the USSR 174 Propaganda published in Pravda denounced all Germans as killers bloodsuckers and cannibals and much play was made of atrocity claims 175 Hatred was actively and overtly encouraged 160 They were told that the Germans took no prisoners 176 Partisans were encouraged to see themselves as avengers 177 Ilya Ehrenburg was a prominent propaganda writer Many anti German films in the Nazi era revolved about the persecution of Jews in Germany such as Professor Mamlock 1938 and The Oppenheim Family 114 Girl No 217 depicted the horrors inflicted on Soviet POWs especially the enslavement of the main character Tanya to an inhuman German family 178 reflecting the harsh treatment of OST Arbeiter in Nazi Germany Despite their own treatment of religion a revival of Orthodoxy was permitted during World War II to demonize Nazism as the sole enemy of religion 179 Vasily Grossman and Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov were war correspondents of the Krasnaya Zvezda Red Star Germany vs Hitlerites Edit Soviet propaganda to Germans during World War II was at pains to distinguish between the ordinary Germans and their leaders the Hitlerites Nazis and declaring they had no quarrel with the people 180 The only way to discover if a German soldier had fallen alive into Soviet hands was to listen the radio would announce that a certain prisoner would speak then give some time for his family to gather and listen and fill it with propaganda 16 A National Committee for Free Germany was founded in Soviet prisoner of war camps in an attempt to foment an uprising in Germany 181 Anti fascism Edit British and Soviet servicemen over body of swastikaed dragon Anti fascism was commonly used in propaganda aimed outside the USSR during the 1930s particularly to draw people into front organizations 182 The Spanish Civil War was in particular used to quash dissent among European communist parties and reports of Stalin s growing totalitarianism 183 Patriotism Nationalism Edit See also Soviet patriotism In face of the threat of Nazi Germany the international claims of communism were played down and people were recruited to help defend the country on patriotic motives 116 The presence of a real enemy was used to inspire action and production in face of the threat to the Father Soviet Union or Mother Russia 184 All Soviet citizens were called on to fight and soldiers who surrendered had failed in their duty 185 To prevent retreats from Stalingrad soldiers were urged to fight for the soil 186 187 All Soviet citizens were called on to fight and soldiers who surrendered had failed in their duty 188 To prevent retreats from Stalingrad soldiers were urged to fight for the soil 189 Russian history was pressed into providing a heroic past and patriotic symbols although selectively for instance praising men as state builders 190 Alexander Nevsky made a central theme the importance of the common people in saving Russia while nobles and merchants did nothing a motif that was heavily employed 191 Still the figures selected had no socialist connection 160 Artists and writers were permitted more freedom as long as they did not criticize Marxism directly and contained patriotic themes 192 It was termed the Great Patriotic War and stories presented it as a fight of ordinary people s heroism 193 While the term motherland was used it was used to mean the Soviet Union although primarily Russian national heroes were used to inspire the soldiers 194 Appeals were also made that the home of other nationalities was the home of their own 195 Many Soviet citizens found treatment of soldiers who fell into enemy hands as traitors to the Motherland as suitable for their own grim determination and not a step back was supposed to inspire soldiers to fight with self sacrifice and heroism However this was in fact realized via NKVD led barrier troops that shot retreating soldiers in the back 196 193 This continued after the war in a campaign to remove supposed anti patriotic elements 197 In the 1960s reviving memories of the Great Patriotic War was used to bolster support for the regime with all accounts to carefully censored to prevent accounts of Stalin s early incompetence the defeats and the heavy cost 198 Utopia and space EditThroughout the history of the Soviet Union the concept of a Socialist Utopia was heavily proselytized by the Soviet government Under the Khrushchev administration this idea of a Soviet utopia was worked heavily into the concept of space travel and spreading across the world 199 The accomplishments in space were closely tied to a sense of utopia and the idea that communism was superior to other forms of government In a press release after Sputnik s launch the Soviet Union states that our contemporaries will witness how the freed and conscientious labour of the people of the new socialist society makes the most daring dreams of mankind a reality 200 The concept of success in science and space exploration were closely tied to the concept of a new socialist society and the utopia that would be created in that society Soviet propaganda abroad Edit Residents of a town in Eastern Poland now Western Belarus assembled to greet the arrival of the Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 The Russian text reads Long Live the great theory of Marx Engels Lenin Stalin Such welcomings were organized by the activists of the Communist Party of West Belarus affiliated with the Polish Communist Party delegalized in Poland by 1938 201 World War II propaganda leaflet dropped from a Soviet airplane on Finnish territory urging Finnish soldiers to surrender See also Soviet influence on the peace movement and Active measures Trotsky and a small group of Communists regarded the Soviet Union as doomed without the spread of the revolution internationally 202 The victory of Stalin who regarded the construction of socialism in the Soviet Union as a necessary exemplar to the rest of the world and represented the majority view 203 did not however stop international propaganda In the 1980s the US Central Intelligence Agency CIA estimated that the budget of Soviet propaganda abroad was between 3 5 and 4 billion 204 Propaganda abroad was partly conducted by Soviet intelligence agencies GRU alone spent more than 1 billion for propaganda and peace movements against Vietnam War which was a hugely successful campaign and well worth the cost according to GRU defector Stanislav Lunev 205 He claimed that the GRU and the KGB helped to fund just about every antiwar movement and organization in America and abroad 205 According to Oleg Kalugin the Soviet intelligence was really unparalleled The KGB programs which would run all sorts of congresses peace congresses youth congresses festivals women s movements trade union movements campaigns against U S missiles in Europe campaigns against neutron weapons allegations that AIDS was invented by the CIA all sorts of forgeries and faked material were targeted at politicians the academic community at the public at large 206 Soviet run movements pretended to have little or no ties with the USSR often seen as noncommunist or allied to such groups but were controlled by the USSR 207 Most members and supporters did not realize that they were instruments of Soviet propaganda 207 208 The organizations aimed at convincing well meaning but naive Westerners to support Soviet overt or covert goals 209 A witness in a US congressional hearing on Soviet cover activity described the goals of such organizations as to spread Soviet propaganda themes and create false impression of public support for the foreign policies of Soviet Union 208 Much of the activity of the Soviet run peace movements was supervised by the World Peace Council 207 208 Other important front organizations included the World Federation of Trade Unions the World Federation of Democratic Youth and the International Union of Students 208 Somewhat less important front organizations included Afro Asian People s Solidarity Organization Christian Peace Conference International Association of Democratic Lawyers International Federation of Resistance Movements International Institute for Peace International Organization of Journalists Women s International Democratic Federation and World Federation of Scientific Workers 210 There were also numerous smaller organizations affiliated with the above fronts 209 211 Those organizations received in total more than 100 million dollars from the USSR every year 207 Propaganda against the United States and the greater Western world included the following actions 212 Promotion of John F Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories allegedly using writer Mark Lane Discrediting the CIA using historian Philip Agee codenamed PONT Spreading rumors that US Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI director J Edgar Hoover was a homosexual Promoting conspiracy theories about Adolf Hitler s death including a Stalin led narrative that he escaped Berlin in 1945 and disinformation about the forensic examination of his body Attempts to discredit Martin Luther King Jr by placing publications portraying him as an Uncle Tom who was secretly receiving government subsidies Stirring up racial tensions in the United States by mailing bogus letters from the Ku Klux Klan and spreading conspiracy theories that the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr had been planned by the US government Fabrication of the story that AIDS virus was manufactured by US scientists at Fort Detrick the story was spread by Russian born biologist Jakob Segal Soviet Weekly was published in Britain Sputnik was a monthly edited in Soviet Union in many languages including English Discounting and downplaying the U S military aid given to the Soviets during WWII under the Lend Lease Act as well as the US s role in victory in general 213 214 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Propaganda of the Soviet Union Soviet Union portalCensorship in the Soviet Union Communist propaganda Kukryniksy Propaganda in China Propaganda in Nazi Germany Propaganda in North Korea Propaganda in the Polish People s Republic Propaganda in Russia Propaganda in the United States Soviet propaganda music during the Cold WarReferences Edit Dolitsky Alexander 1 August 2021 Alexander Dolitsky Remembering the Soviet psychological documentary film I and Others that I took part in Must Read Alaska Retrieved 1 November 2022 a b Robert Conquest Reflections on a Ravaged Century 2000 ISBN 0 393 04818 7 pp 101 111 p 8 Peter Kenez The Birth of the Propaganda State Soviet Methods of Mass Mobilization 1917 1929 Cambridge University Press 1985 Raymond Bauer Our big advantage the social sciences development in the US and Soviet Union compared Harvard Business Review vol 36 1958 pp 125 136 quoted in Alex Carey 1997 Taking the Risk out of Democracy Corporate Propaganda versus Freedom and Liberty University of Illinois Press p 13 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p315 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 a b c d Orlando Figes The Whisperers Private Life in Stalin s Russia 2007 ISBN 0 8050 7461 9 pp 20 31 a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 356 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 143 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 365 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 406 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 94 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 374 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 378 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p 379 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b c Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p212 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York a b Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p224 158 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 140 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p218 9 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York a b Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p214 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p308 9 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 a b c Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p219 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Soviet Cinema Archived 26 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Kenez Peter 1985 Agitational trains and ships The Birth of the Propaganda State Soviet Methods of Mass Mobilization 1917 1929 Cambridge University Press p 58 ISBN 9780521313988 Retrieved 22 April 2016 An unusual and yet typically Bolshevik method of oral agitation was to send agitational trains and ships into the countryside Watson Derek 2016 Molotov A Biography Centre for Russian and East European Studies Springer p 35 ISBN 9780230514522 Retrieved 22 April 2014 On 26 June 1919 VTsIK The All Russian Central Executive Committee placed Molotov in command of the agitparokhod agitation steamboat Krasnaya Zvezda Red Star He was to work in the Volga provinces freed from White forces The Krasnaya Zvezda towed a barge equipped as an outdoor cinema to show films such as Electricity in the Countryside to audiences of 1000 strong at a single performance There was a shop that sold books and the ship had its own press to produce free literature Karel C Berkhoff Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule p190 ISBN 0 674 01313 1 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 358 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 157 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p282 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p368 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p283 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 a b Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p292 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 a b eye magazine Designing heroes Archived 9 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine a b c Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p260 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p355 6 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbuam and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p1 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p350 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Roy Medvedev Let History Judgep41 ISBN 0 231 06350 4 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p292 3 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p294 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 a b Introduction USSR in Construction wayback archive it org Gail Warshofsky Lapidus Women in Soviet Society Equality Development and Social Change University of California Press 1978 p 64 Gail Warshofsky Lapidus Women in Soviet Society Equality Development and Social Change University of California Press 1978 p 65 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p294 5 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p84 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 137 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 138 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p482 3 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p303 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p305 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 B R Myers The Cleanest Race p 81 ISBN 978 1 933633 91 6 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p258 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p301 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p129 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b B R Myers The Cleanest Race p 86 ISBN 978 1 933633 91 6 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p258 9 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 217 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b c d Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p259 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p35 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 247 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p488 9 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p257 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 246 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p194 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 245 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p12 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 108 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p12 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p234 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Roy Medvedev Let History Judge p93 ISBN 0 231 06350 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 179 80 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p54 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 210 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p197 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p210 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p233 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Timothy Snyder Bloodlands Europe Between Hitler and Stalin p 41 ISBN 978 0 465 00239 9 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p466 7 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p490 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p488 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 276 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 319 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Coste Brutus January 1950 Propaganda to Eastern Europe The Public Opinion Quarterly 14 4 639 66 doi 10 1086 266246 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p262 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p231 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p233 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p235 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p167 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p171 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 239 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b c Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p22 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p98 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p86 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p358 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p267 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p290 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p291 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p182 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Mark Mazower Dark Continent Europe s 20th Century p120 1 ISBN 0 679 43809 2 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 177 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 186 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p208 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p208 9 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p281 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Moscow Volga Canal Archived 3 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p253 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p 188 9 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 278 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p189 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Mark Mazower Dark Continent Europe s 20th Century p276 7 ISBN 0 679 43809 2 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 356 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 405 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 96 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 332 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b c d Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p216 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 254 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p217 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p11 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 142 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 84 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 270 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Meirion and Susie Harries Soldiers of the Sun The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army p 139 40 ISBN 0 394 56935 0 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 282 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Meirion and Susie Harries Soldiers of the Sun The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army p 469 70 ISBN 0 394 56935 0 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p107 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 93 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 153 4 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p112 3 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 a b Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 198 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p114 5 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p10 1 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Roy Medvedev Let History Judge p55 6 ISBN 0 231 06350 4 Roy Medvedev Let History Judge p63 ISBN 0 231 06350 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p117 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p10 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Lewis Siegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p209 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p468 9 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 a b Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p489 90 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p 259 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 263 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 289 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 347 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Roy Medvedev Let History Judge p133 ISBN 0 231 06350 4 a b c Nicolas Werth Karel Bartosek Jean Louis Panne Jean Louis Margolin Andrzej Paczkowski Stephane Courtois The Black Book of Communism Crimes Terror Repression Harvard University Press 1999 ISBN 0 674 07608 7 Richard Pipes 1993 Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p 309 Black Book p 749 Black Book p 750 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p271 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Anthony Rhodes Propaganda The art of persuasion World War II p214 216 1976 Chelsea House Publishers New York Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p271 2 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p314 5 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p326 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p275 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p74 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p75 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 a b Powell David 1967 The Effectiveness of Soviet Anti Religious Propaganda The Public Opinion Quarterly 31 3 366 380 doi 10 1086 267536 JSTOR 2747392 Richard Pipes Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime p 338 ISBN 978 0 394 50242 7 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p 269 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Dozhdikova Nadezhda 2009 Chem byl nedovolen Berlioz O romane M A Bulgakova Master i Margarita i probleme Hrista Neva in Russian 7 ISSN 0130 741X Retrieved 13 May 2019 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 135 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b c Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p68 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p 283 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 142 3 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p299 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 R J B Bosworth Mussolini s Italy p134 ISBN 1 59420 078 5 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p484 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Gerhard L Weinberg Visions of Victory The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders p 100 ISBN 0 521 85254 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 362 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Lewis Stegelbaum and Andrei Sokolov Stalinism As A Way Of Life p178 ISBN 0 300 08480 3 Geopolitics through Soviet Propagandist Messages a research by Sovlab The Soviet Invasion of Poland and Historical Memory Research Teacher 19 September 2014 Zofia Waszkiewicz Baruch Steinberg in Polski Slownik Biograficzny t XLIII 2004 2005 pp 305 306 a b c Piers Brendon The Dark Valley A Panorama of the 1930s p683 ISBN 0 375 40881 9 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 284 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p483 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p516 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p518 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p521 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Girl No 217 Archived 28 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p277 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Rhodes Anthony 1976 Propaganda The Art of Persuasion World War II New York Chelsea House Publishers pp 158 222 Balfour Michael Propaganda in War 1939 1945 Organisation Policies and Publics in Britain and Germany ISBN 0 7100 0193 2 p 359 Alan Riding And the Show Went On Cultural Life in Nazi Occupied Paris p 22 ISBN 978 0 307 26897 6 Alan Riding And the Show Went On Cultural Life in Nazi Occupied Paris p 24 ISBN 978 0 307 26897 6 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p503 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p515 6 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p535 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p503 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p515 6 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p535 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p559 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p558 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 281 ISBN 0 674 01801 X a b Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p 291 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p559 60 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Robert Service A History of Modern Russia from Nicholas II to Putin p 283 ISBN 0 674 01801 X Dmitri Volkogonov Trotsky The Eternal Revolutionary transl and edited by Harold Shukman HarperCollins Publishers London 1996 p 180 Mikhail Heller Aleksander M Nekrich Utopia in Power p487 ISBN 0 671 46242 3 Richard Overy Why the Allies Won p 328 ISBN 0 393 03925 0 M Gilison Jerome 1975 The Soviet image of utopia The Johns Hopkins Univ Press ISBN 0 8018 1696 3 OCLC 695524202 Cleaver A V January 1959 Behind the sputniks A Survey of soviet space science F J Krieger Public Affairs Press U S A 1958 380 pp Illustrated 6 dollars The Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society 63 577 65 doi 10 1017 s0368393100070565 ISSN 0368 3931 S2CID 113748329 in Polish Marek Wierzbicki Stosunki polsko bialoruskie pod okupacja sowiecka 1939 1941 Bialoruskie Zeszyty Historyczne NA STARONKAH KAMUNIKATU Bielaruski histaryczny zbornik 20 2003 p 186 188 Retrieved 16 July 2007 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p 25 26 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Overy The Dictators Hitler s Germany Stalin s Russia p 38 ISBN 0 393 02030 4 Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 75 a b Stanislav Lunev Through the Eyes of the Enemy The Autobiography of Stanislav Lunev Regnery Publishing Inc 1998 ISBN 0 89526 390 4 CNN Cold War Experience Espionage 27 June 2007 Archived from the original on 27 June 2007 a b c d Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 79 a b c d Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 84 a b Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 86 Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 80 81 Richard Felix Staar Foreign policies of the Soviet Union Archived 17 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine Hoover Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9102 6 p 82 83 Mitrokhin Vasili Christopher Andrew 2000 The Mitrokhin Archive The KGB in Europe and the West Gardners Books ISBN 0 14 028487 7 Weeks Russia s Life Saver Lend Lease Aid to the U S S R in World War II 126 Alexander Hill British Lend Lease Aid and the Soviet War Effort June 1941 1942 The Journal of Military History 71 no 3 2007 pp 773 808 Accessed 1 November 2011 Further reading EditEllul Jacques Propaganda The Formation of Men s Attitudes Trans Konrad Kellen amp Jean Lerner New York Knopf 1965 New York Random House Vintage 1973 Fateev Andrey 1999 Obraz vraga v sovetskoj propagande 1945 1954 gg Image of the enemy in Soviet propaganda 1945 1954 in Russian Moscow IRH RAS ru External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Propaganda of the Soviet Union Soviet World War II Propaganda Posters Soviet and Russian Propaganda Posters A digital presentation of several issues of the propaganda journal USSR in Construction by the University of Saskatchewan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Propaganda in the Soviet Union amp oldid 1152133137, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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