Between Post-Stalinist Legitimacy and Stalin's Authority: Memories of 1941 from Late Socialism to the Post-Soviet Era

This article analyses the ways in which post-Soviet debates over whether and how to remember the defeats of the early period of World War II were shaped by earlier Soviet-era debates over war memory and legitimacy. It argues that the reaction against the Khrushchev thaw in the early Brezhnev era-whi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian Slavonic papers 2012-09, Vol.54 (3-4), p.357-376
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description This article analyses the ways in which post-Soviet debates over whether and how to remember the defeats of the early period of World War II were shaped by earlier Soviet-era debates over war memory and legitimacy. It argues that the reaction against the Khrushchev thaw in the early Brezhnev era-which eventually gave rise to the quintessentially late socialist "war cult"-initially led to a deep contestation between the state and some of the Soviet intelligentsia, not only regarding the Soviet narrative of 1941, but also over the broader question of whether Soviet public memory could and should accommodate defeats and trauma as well as celebration of victory. Though promptly curtailed by the exercise of party-state authority, this debate quickly resurfaced in glasnost', when debates over the early war once again became a crucible for disputes over broader questions of Soviet memory and its role in legitimating (or re-legitimating) Soviet power. These two debates are then compared with the strikingly similar dynamics of war memory contestation in post-Soviet Russia.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Commemorations
Communism
Glasnost
Heroism
Intelligentsia
Legitimacy
Memory
Narrative history
Narratives
Political debate
Political leadership
Political parties
Post-Soviet studies
RUSSIA
Russian culture
Russian Federation
Russian history
Socialism
Stalin, Joseph Vissarionovich (1879-1953)
Stalinism
U.S.S.R
War
World War II
World wars
Writers
title Between Post-Stalinist Legitimacy and Stalin's Authority: Memories of 1941 from Late Socialism to the Post-Soviet Era
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