Zhdanovshchina

Zhdanovshchina

▪ Soviet policy
English  Zhdanovism 

      cultural policy of the Soviet Union during the Cold War period following World War II, calling for stricter government control of art and promoting an extreme anti-Western bias. Originally applied to literature, it soon spread to other arts and gradually affected all spheres of intellectual activity in the Soviet Union, including philosophy, biology, medicine, and other sciences. It was initiated by a resolution (1946) of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union that was formulated by the party secretary and cultural boss Andrey Aleksandrovich Zhdanov (Zhdanov, Andrey Aleksandrovich). It was directed against two literary magazines, Zvezda and Leningrad, which had published supposedly apolitical, bourgeois, individualistic works of the satirist Mikhail Zoshchenko and the poet Anna Akhmatova, who were expelled from the Union of Soviet Writers. The union itself underwent reorganization, but the aims of the resolution were more far-reaching: to free Soviet culture from “servility before the West.”

      As the campaign accelerated, all vestiges of Westernism, or cosmopolitanism, in Soviet life were ferreted out. Earlier critics and literary historians were denounced for suggesting that Russian classics had been influenced by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Molière, Lord Byron, or Charles Dickens. Western inventions and scientific theories were claimed to be of Russian origin. Although Zhdanov died in 1948, the campaign against “cosmopolites” continued until the death of Joseph Stalin (Stalin, Joseph) in 1953, acquiring increasingly anti-Semitic overtones.

      This period (1946–53) is generally regarded as the lowest ebb of Soviet literature, and, short though it was, it created a barrier in Soviet-Western cultural interchange that was difficult to overcome.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Sergei Prokofiev — Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev ( ru. Сергей Сергеевич Прокофьев, Sergéj Sergéjevič Prokófjev ) (OldStyleDate|27 April|1891|15 April 5 March 1953 [While Prokofiev himself believed 23 April to be his birth date, the posthumous discovery of his birth… …   Wikipedia

  • Andrei Zhdanov — Andrei Aleksandrovich Zhdanov (Андрей Александрович Жданов) (Mariupol , OldStyleDate|February 26|1896|February 14 ndash;August 31, 1948, Moscow) was a Soviet politician.LifeZhdanov joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (bolsheviks) in …   Wikipedia

  • Vasiliy Ulrikh — Vasiliy Vasilievich Ulrikh (July 13, 1889 ndash; May 7, 1951) was a senior judge of the Soviet Union during most of the regime of Joseph Stalin. In this capacity, Ulrikh served as the presiding judge at many of the major show trials of the Great… …   Wikipedia

  • Alexander Alexandrovich Fadeyev — ( ru. Александр Александрович Фадеев; OldStyleDate|24 December|1901|11 December ndash;May 13, 1956) was a Soviet writer, one of the co founders of the Union of Soviet Writers and its chairman from 1946 to 1954.Fadeyev was brought up in Chuguyevka …   Wikipedia

  • Dedovshchina — (Russian: дедовщина) [dʲɪdɐfˈɕːinə] (literally, grandfatherism) is the name given to the informal system of subjection of new junior conscripts, formerly to the Soviet Armed Forces and today to the Russian armed forces, Interior Ministry, and (to …   Wikipedia

  • Mieczysław Weinberg — (also Moisey or Moishe Vainberg, Moisey Samuilovich Vaynberg; Russian: Моисей Самуилович Вайнберг; Polish: Mieczysław Wajnberg; December 8, 1919 in Warsaw – February 26, 1996 in Moscow) was a Soviet composer of Polish Jewish origin. From 1939 he… …   Wikipedia

  • Alexander Gerasimov — Alexander Mikhaylovich Gerasimov ( ru. Александр Михайлович Герасимов) (August 12, 1881 mdash; July 23, 1963) was a leading proponent of Socialist Realism in the visual arts, and painted Stalin as well as other Soviet leaders.Gerasimov was born… …   Wikipedia

  • Russia — /rush euh/, n. 1. Also called Russian Empire. Russian, Rossiya. a former empire in E Europe and N and W Asia: overthrown by the Russian Revolution 1917. Cap.: St. Petersburg (1703 1917). 2. See Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 3. See Russian… …   Universalium

  • Union of Soviet Socialist Republics — a former federal union of 15 constituent republics, in E Europe and W and N Asia, comprising the larger part of the former Russian Empire: dissolved in December 1991. 8,650,069 sq. mi. (22,402,200 sq. km). Cap.: Moscow. Also called Russia, Soviet …   Universalium

  • Russian literature — Introduction       the body of written works produced in the Russian language, beginning with the Christianization of Kievan Rus in the late 10th century.       The unusual shape of Russian literary history has been the source of numerous… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”