Read Being Soviet: Identity, Rumour, and Everyday Life Under Stalin 1939-1953 Online
Authors: Timothy Johnston
Tags: #History, #Europe, #General, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Modern, #20th Century, #Social History, #Political Science, #Political Ideologies, #Communism; Post-Communism & Socialism
119–20
and honour
93,
103–5,
111–20
and might
12–14,
29,
53–4,
59–60,
144–6,
153
and moral authority
55–7,
59–60,
93–4,
146–7
and peace (see peace campaigns)
and technology
91
Ogon¨ek
xxvi,
10,
11,
17,
18,
49,
51,
58,
102,
129,
132,
169,
170,
173,
176,
201
Osokina, E.
xxxiii
outside world
xlii,
12–13,
30
access to
xlii
as a threat
160–5
glamour of
90,
115–16,
121–3,
198–200,
202–7
panics (see hoarding food)
patronage
17,
146–9,
152–4
peace policy of USSR
xxvii–xxviii,
5–6,
8–11,
13–15,
142–65
congresses for peace
142,
145
contrast to pacifism
155–8
and moral authority
146–8
reappropriation of
155–60
signature campaigns
145–6,
149–51,
155
success of
149–60
performance
xxxiv,
90,
98,
110,
118,
183–5,
187–8
Poland
37–8
(see also expansion of
USSR)
´
emigr
´
e
government
56,
59
Polish nationalism (see nationalist
movements)
Pravda
xxvi,
4,
5,
9,
11,
16,
18,
29,
37,
48,
50,
51,
56,
58,
59,
65,
101–2,
129,
139–40,
142,
150,
157,
159,
160,
169,
170,
178,
192,
196
procuracy case files
xlvi,
30,
35,
36,
39,
40,
74,
75,
78,
96,
113,
133,
134,
139,
155,
193,
194,
195,
200–1
Prokofiev, S.
176,
187,
189,
192
reappropriation
xxxii
–xxxiii,
2
0–1
,
3
2–4,
88,
15
6–60,
185–
9,
199
Red Army
45–6,
53–6,
61
resistance
xx–xxix,
xxxviii,
25–6
dichotomy of support and
resistance
xxiii–xxiv,
xxxii,
xxxiv,
xxxviii–xxxix,
xli,
20,
26–7,
118,
194–5
and rumour
24–6,
134–7
Roosevelt, F.
50,
56,
58,
68,
75,
81–2,
93,
131
Rosner, E.
177,
188
Rosnow, R. and Fine, G.
xxxv
rumour
xxxiv–xl,
xliii,
xxxv
and credibility
xxxix,
27
,
30
–2
,
78
–9
,
16
0–
2
loyal rumourers
xxxviii–xxxix,
27–8,
77–8,
138–9
as resistance
25–7,
76–7,
134–7
spread by nationalist groups
26,
38,
135–6
spread by religious groups
26–7,
136–7
spread due to lack of
information
xxxix,
23–4,
30–2,
61–2,
78–9,
161–2
‘successful rumours’ and
mentalit
´
e
xliii,
21,
64,
78,
137–9,
160–5
widespread in USSR
xxxiv–xl,
xliii,
26–7,
61–4
rumours about
capitalist luxury
35–8
church
74,
136–7
collective farms
74–5,
96,
136,
163
Comintern
73–4,
77
war
23
–6
,
29
,
76
–7
,
13
3–
41
,
15
4–
65
Russo-Finnish War 1939–40
(see Winter war and expansion of
USSR (1939–41))
science
xxx,
18,
87,
91–2,
174,
179–80
capitalist science in the USSR
x
xx–xx
xi,
1
8,
32–
3,
87,
17
2–4,
1
82–3
propaganda about capitalist
science
17–18,
87,
174–6
superiority of capitalist science
19
3–
4
superiority of Soviet science
18,
32–4,
180–1,
195–6
Scott, J.
22,
24,
30,
36,
39
Second Front
49–54,
57–9
interest in and rumours about
65–7,
70–2,
96–7,
107
Shostakovich, D.
176,
187,
189
sources
xliv–xlvi,
21
Soviet modernity
xix–xx,
48
‘speaking Bolshevik’
xxxii
240
Index
spies in literature and cinema
8,
10,
12,
146,
174
Stalin, J.
4,
9,
47–8,
49,
50,
51–2,
57–8,
68–9,
71,
75,
92,
96,
130,
142,
158
Stalinism
xvii–xxiv
Steinbeck, J.
196–7
stiliagi
200–5
superpower identity
132,
148–9,
165
svodki
xliv–xlvi,
65,
68,
71,
73,
133–4,
138,
151,
154,
193,
195
‘tactics of the habitat’
xxxii–xli,
20–1,
88,
109–10,
120–1,
123,
139,
156,
158–60,
184,
187,
189–90,
199,
207–8
tanks
97–8
Tehran Conference
49,
51–2,
54–5
thanks to USSR
17,
60,
146–9,
152–4,
167
theatre
50,
85,
91,
131,
146,
171,
172,
174,
177
‘thinking Bolshevik’
98,
183
totalitarianism
xx–xxi,
xxiii
trucks from capitalist world
98–9,
184,
196–7
Truman, H.
131,
147