Stalin's Quest for Gold: The Torgsin Hard-Currency Shops and Soviet Industrialization
Stalin's Quest for Gold tells the story of Torgsin, a chain of retail shops established in 1930 with the aim of raising the hard currency needed to finance the USSR's ambitious industrialization program. At a time of desperate scarcity, Torgsin had access to the country's best foodstu...
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Zusammenfassung: | Stalin's Quest for Gold tells
the story of Torgsin, a chain of retail shops established in 1930
with the aim of raising the hard currency needed to finance the
USSR's ambitious industrialization program. At a time of
desperate scarcity, Torgsin had access to the country's best
foodstuffs and goods. Initially, only foreigners were allowed to
shop in Torgsin, but the acute demand for hard-currency revenues
forced Stalin to open Torgsin to Soviet citizens who could exchange
tsarist gold coins and objects made of precious metals and
gemstones, as well as foreign monies, for foods and goods in its
shops.
Through her analysis of the large-scale, state-run
entrepreneurship represented by Torgsin, Elena Osokina highlights
the complexity and contradictions of Stalinism. Driven by the
state's hunger for gold and the people's starvation, Torgsin
rejected Marxist postulates of the socialist political economy: the
notorious class approach and the state hard-currency monopoly. In
its pursuit for gold, Torgsin advertised in the capitalist West,
encouraging foreigners to purchase goods for their relatives in the
USSR; and its seaport shops and restaurants operated semilegally as
brothels, inducing foreign sailors to spend hard currency for
Soviet industrialization. Examining Torgsin from multiple
perspectives-economic expediency, state and police surveillance,
consumerism, even interior design and personnel- Stalin's Quest
for Gold radically transforms the stereotypical view of the
Soviet economy and enriches our understanding of everyday life in
Stalin's Russia. |
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DOI: | 10.7591/j.ctv1bxh5qj |