Read Jessen & Richter (Eds.) Online
Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
through which public support for the government is demonstrated; “im-
pression management”, by which a democratic facade is built; “preference
falsification”, meaning an attempt to create a widespread belief that every-
one is favorable towards the regime; and, finally, an “accommodation
function”, by which promises to share the spoils of office with one’s sup-
——————
6 For example, about 47 per cent of the RSFSR population was under 25 in 1959: Tsentral’noe Statisticheskoe Upravlenie (1963).
7 One exception is a recent dissertation by Benjamin Tromly, which examines the education of elite Soviet students in the postwar Stalin years and the Thaw, and which comments briefly on elections.
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porters are made more credible. This chapter relies on a range of archival
sources,8 as well as Soviet publications, recent memoirs, and interviews.9
In looking at youth participation in elections to the Supreme Soviet and
to local soviets, the organs of the Soviet government, in the 1950s and
1960s, my essay shows that such events served the purpose of political
indoctrination by calling on activist Komsomol members to assist in con-
ducting elections. Still, the evidence shows the need to shift the traditional
historiographic emphasis from elections as purely political events, by
drawing attention to elements of merry-making inherent to the election
process. Comparing these to other Soviet celebrations, I argue that the
system, in contrast to the image of top-down coercive indoctrination, also
offered significant consumption-oriented incentives for those willing to
participate. This reveals the softer side of dictatorial dominance of elec-
tions as social practice.
While youth participation in elections to the Supreme Soviet and local
soviets remained largely unchanged from the Stalin years to the Thaw, my
research finds more of a break in elections within the Komsomol itself.
Departing decisively from postwar Stalinist precedents, some young peo-
ple, drawing on the novel tones in the Komsomol leadership’s discourse
encouraging grassroots participation, challenged existing election practices.
These youth positioned themselves as a “loyal opposition” within Komso-
mol elections. They publicly expressed full support for the Khrushchev
leadership and the goal of building communism, while lambasting local
officials for authoritarian methods that made elections into a pure formal-
ity, and occasionally even taking power away from entrenched cadres. By
doing so, they demonstrated significant individual agency, meaning self-
willed actions responding to the interests and desires of young people
themselves (Krylova 2010; Appadurai 1996, 5–11; Grossberg 1992, 113–
27).
Such unanticipated, spontaneous elements in Komsomol elections un-
derscore that previously conformist “elections without choice” could be
transformed from a tool of political integration into a source of challenge
——————
8 From the Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv noveishei istorii (RGANI); Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyii arkhiv sotisial’no-politicheskoi istorii (RGASPI); Tsentral’nyi arkhiv goroda Moskvy (TsAGM); Tsentral’nyi arkhiv obshchestvenno-politicheskoi istorii
Moskvy (TsAOPIM).
9 From an interview series that I conducted in 2008–09 with those who grew up in the post-Stalin years.
I N T E G R A T I O N , C E L E B R A T I O N , A N D C H A L L E N G E
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and instability for socialist states in times of reform and uncertainty, a
finding that parallels that of a number of other contributions to this vol-
ume.
Youth and Elections to Soviet Government Organs:
Integration and Celebration
A resolution by the KCC at its Fifth Plenum in December 1950 dealing
with elections to the Supreme Soviets of the republics making up the So-
viet Union, their highest government bodies, stressed the critical organiza-
tional role ascribed to activist Komsomol youth. The decree noted that
such young people already performed agitation work for the elections to
local soviets: “Hundreds of thousands of Komsomol members worked as
agitators, took part in setting up and decorating election sites and agitation
points, putting together lists of voters”. It called on them to perform
analogous tasks for these elections, such as organizing election sites, in-
forming voters of the time and place of voting, and organizing various
mass events, including lectures, meetings with candidates, and cultural
events at election sites. The resolution even directly cited the political so-
cialization and integration function of elections: “The upcoming elections
[...] will enhance the further growth of the political activity of Soviet
youth”.10 Similar rhetoric characterized the Khrushchev years.11
While previous research made patent youth involvement in agitation
and propaganda devoted to elections to the soviets, it paid little attention
to the cultural events also referred to in the decrees, which cast light on
elements of celebration and festiveness that were present both before and
after Stalin’s death. One of the principal forms of such youth engagement
in Soviet democracy came via amateur arts collectives, volunteer groups of
young amateur musicians and actors, which had substantial popularity
among the citizenry. The government sponsored the amateur arts collec-
tives, providing the institutional and organizational basis for these groups
in state-owned clubs, sending government-paid cultural workers to lead the
——————
10
Posotanovlenie piatogo plenuma TsK VLKSM (26–27 dekabria 1950 goda)
(Moscow:
“Molodaia gvardiia”, 1951), 7–14.
11 A. N. Shelepin,
Otchetnyi doklad TsK VLKSM XII s’’ezdu komsomola
(Moscow: “Molodaia gvardiia”, 1954), 42.
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groups, and creating spaces and supplying musical and theatre equipment
for their performances. Altogether, Moscow apparently had over 1,400
collectives in 1947, which put on over 7,000 or more shows.12
The Soviet state frequently engaged the amateur arts collectives to per-
form at election sites. One of the principal tasks of the Moscow Krasno-
presnenskii district Cultural-enlightenment department involved overseeing
the work of labor union clubs and their amateur arts collectives. Its annual
report of 1951 records how the department organized “Performances of
amateur arts at district enterprises during the days of the election cam-
paign”, specifically praising the club of the Moscow Sugar factory for hav-
ing “good amateur arts, which performed at election sites”.13 In 1957, this
same organization reported that it had 1,500 young people in over 70 col-
lectives giving over 130 concerts, with some dedicated to elections to local
soviets.14 By 1959, about 3,000 young people participated in amateur arts
collectives, giving over 300 concerts for approximately 200,000 people in
the Krasnopresnenskii district. According to the report, such amateur arts
are “used in all district political-mass events, and during the time of the
elections to the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR and local soviets in 1959
alone there were over 100 concerts”.15 The KCC underlined the critical
role of clubs to Soviet-style democracy in a report in the autumn of 1945
about the problematic state of cultural work in labor union clubs, with “the
acute nature of this problem made worse by the fact that clubs are cur-
rently obliged to do much work in relation to the election campaign”.16 A
1946 KCC decree, entitled “About mass physical culture events dedicated
to elections to the USSR Supreme Soviet”, demonstrates that other organ-
ized leisure events also served to promote Soviet democracy.17
Youth also constituted the object of celebratory elements in elections
to the Soviet government in addition to being the subjects supplying such
festivities. In one case in point, the Moscow food industry club held an
evening for the young voters of the food industry workforce on November
25, 1950 with a talk entitled “The Stalin constitution and Soviet youth”,
followed by a play based on a novel by the laureate of the Stalin prize, E.
——————
12 TsAGM, f. 2011, op. 1, d. 49, ll. 357–59.
13 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 9, ll. 8–10.
14 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 52a, ll. 8–9.
15 TsAGM, f. 1988, op. 1, d. 72, l. 24.
16 RGASPI, f. M–1, op. 3, d. 403, ll. 17–22.
17 RGASPI, f. M–1, op. 3, d. 408, l. 10.
I N T E G R A T I O N , C E L E B R A T I O N , A N D C H A L L E N G E
87
Kazakevich.18 The Komsomol election committee conference of Krasno-
presnenskii district in 1950 records that “there were especially many inter-
esting events for youth during the preparation for the 70th anniversary of
Stalin’s birth and the election campaign”.19 No wonder, then, that Irina,
who grew up under Khrushchev, recalls elections as a time of leisure and
celebration, with concerts of amateur arts, enjoyable social interaction, and
cheap goods for sale.20 Still, for some youth involved in amateur arts and
agitation related to elections, this occasionally proved a burden. Thus, in
1951, a Komsomol official at the Government University of Theater Arts
(GITIS) complained of the excessive requirements placed upon the stu-
dents both to perform and propagandize for elections, which apparently
hindered their actual education.21
The amateur arts collectives also performed at other ideologically and