In the mid-twentieth century scholars in the United States began to examine American society through the lens of civil religion, a term first coined by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the eighteenth century. Although much of the discussion focused on civil religion in the US, other scholars began to recognise that a civil religion also existed in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. While American civil religion developed organically within all strata of society, it can be argued that in the Soviet Union there was a deliberate strategy to use civil religion as a tool to replace established religion, and to create a single sense of Soviet identity among a geographically-dispersed and ethnically-diverse population. Most studies on Soviet civil r...
Masters at visual propaganda, the Bolsheviks produced thousands of vivid and compelling posters afte...
Russians lost a state and a ruling party in 1991. But more than this, they lost a belief system that...
Although the cult of personality certainly owed something to Stalin’s affinity for self-aggrandiseme...
In the mid-twentieth century scholars in the United States began to examine American society through...
“Soiuz” in Russian means “union” — a key word in the formal name of the Union of Soviet Socialist Re...
The author considers the process of adopting of a new state symbols in Russia after the collapse of ...
Orthodox Christianity is the most widespread religion in Russia. Recently, there have been a lot of ...
In the Soviet Union (1922-1991) small flags designed for and used by children were more than just to...
Visual archetypes from Russian Orthodox iconography shaped a widely understood visual vocabulary wit...
Submitted to the Undergraduate Library Research Award scholarship competition: 2014-2015. 25 pages.T...
Political socialisation is the process through which citizens acquire a sense of national identity a...
The sociological concept of civil religion has been widely studied and debated within social scien...
A number of modern philosophers believe that Soviet ideology, despite materialism and atheism of Mar...
The main idea of the article is how the early Russian symbols influenced the formation of heraldic i...
The paper is devoted to the phenomenon of the “communist shift” in the mass Orthodox culture of the ...
Masters at visual propaganda, the Bolsheviks produced thousands of vivid and compelling posters afte...
Russians lost a state and a ruling party in 1991. But more than this, they lost a belief system that...
Although the cult of personality certainly owed something to Stalin’s affinity for self-aggrandiseme...
In the mid-twentieth century scholars in the United States began to examine American society through...
“Soiuz” in Russian means “union” — a key word in the formal name of the Union of Soviet Socialist Re...
The author considers the process of adopting of a new state symbols in Russia after the collapse of ...
Orthodox Christianity is the most widespread religion in Russia. Recently, there have been a lot of ...
In the Soviet Union (1922-1991) small flags designed for and used by children were more than just to...
Visual archetypes from Russian Orthodox iconography shaped a widely understood visual vocabulary wit...
Submitted to the Undergraduate Library Research Award scholarship competition: 2014-2015. 25 pages.T...
Political socialisation is the process through which citizens acquire a sense of national identity a...
The sociological concept of civil religion has been widely studied and debated within social scien...
A number of modern philosophers believe that Soviet ideology, despite materialism and atheism of Mar...
The main idea of the article is how the early Russian symbols influenced the formation of heraldic i...
The paper is devoted to the phenomenon of the “communist shift” in the mass Orthodox culture of the ...
Masters at visual propaganda, the Bolsheviks produced thousands of vivid and compelling posters afte...
Russians lost a state and a ruling party in 1991. But more than this, they lost a belief system that...
Although the cult of personality certainly owed something to Stalin’s affinity for self-aggrandiseme...