This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on ‘everyday life’ in the Soviet Union: (1) How did Soviet citizens perceive, understand, and adapt to the 1930s? And (2) What were the principal associational structures of Soviet society in these years? These issues are not easily separated, with the second constituting a vital element of the first. They are therefore explored simultaneously in the first three chapters, which examine, respectively, the nature and possibilities of joke-telling in the 1930s; the principal targets of that humour; and, thirdly, its implicit assumptions, values and thematic proclivities. The fourth chapter concentrates on the structure and nature of sociability in...
This study explores the general outlook of it under question and its meaning in the given period of ...
In the mid-to-late 1930s, Soviet society witnessed a major ideological about-face as party propagand...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
The Stalinist reign of terror was not all gloom and darkness. Much of it was, or aimed to be, entert...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
This dissertation argues that the massive Soviet socialization project, one that re-arranged people’...
In 1935 the Communist Youth League (Komsomol) embraced a policy called "communist upbringing" that c...
This dissertation explores the evolution of Soviet public culture during the decade of destalinisati...
During the Second Five-Year Plan, the leaders of the Soviet state sought to create an atmosphere of ...
This dissertation examines the nature of Soviet youth cultures during the period of the New Economic...
This dissertation examines the relationship between government propaganda, popular beliefs, and the ...
This article reviews the transformation of dietary practices through the prism of their portrayal in...
This article is a study on the reciprocal dynamics between the mass readers and state power in socia...
For historians of twentieth-century British affairs, the decade of the 1930s is very significant. It...
This study explores the general outlook of it under question and its meaning in the given period of ...
In the mid-to-late 1930s, Soviet society witnessed a major ideological about-face as party propagand...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...
This thesis contributes primarily to answering two broad questions within the current scholarship on...
The Stalinist reign of terror was not all gloom and darkness. Much of it was, or aimed to be, entert...
Stalin's reign of terror was not all doom and gloom, much of it was (meant to be) funny! From comedy...
This dissertation argues that the massive Soviet socialization project, one that re-arranged people’...
In 1935 the Communist Youth League (Komsomol) embraced a policy called "communist upbringing" that c...
This dissertation explores the evolution of Soviet public culture during the decade of destalinisati...
During the Second Five-Year Plan, the leaders of the Soviet state sought to create an atmosphere of ...
This dissertation examines the nature of Soviet youth cultures during the period of the New Economic...
This dissertation examines the relationship between government propaganda, popular beliefs, and the ...
This article reviews the transformation of dietary practices through the prism of their portrayal in...
This article is a study on the reciprocal dynamics between the mass readers and state power in socia...
For historians of twentieth-century British affairs, the decade of the 1930s is very significant. It...
This study explores the general outlook of it under question and its meaning in the given period of ...
In the mid-to-late 1930s, Soviet society witnessed a major ideological about-face as party propagand...
Humor as a Mirror of Political Reality: Anti-Communist humor in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia ...