1941- military
intelligence- blamed for
not alerting him of G’s
plan to invade R
Generals who
performed badly
against G’s army
were shot
The enemy within
NKVD drew up list of
ppl who might be
sympathetic to
Germans
Political prisoners
in regions under
threat from G
invasion were
excuted
Ethnic groups e.g.
Siberia who were said
to welcome G invasion
Chechen ppl- ordered all
460,00 ppl to be moved in 7
days- weather made it
impossible= locked in stables
& barns/ burned alive
The Doctor’s plot
Concerned with those
so closest to him
Physician aroused his suspicion suggesting
that he should reduce his work load to
improve his health- arrested and so were 30
others
Charged with assassination
of the communist party &
trying to poison him
He died before this
purge could escalate
The Leningrad affair
Concerned about his
authority in 2nd city
Over a thousand
party members from
there sacked
Over a thousand
party members from
there sacked
Confessions extracted
by using NKVD’s
conveyor belt system
Purge of the Jews
Suspicious of
former allies
Concerned with citizens
who had contact with
outside world
Any cosmopolitan
Russian was spy
& traitor
Believed jews were
fundamentally
cosmopolitan & had
more loyalty to Jews than
R
Propaganda
Censorship
Content of
pictures tightly
controlled
Detailed guidelines –
specific works on specific
subjects
Some
music/operas
banned
Union of
Soviet
Writers
Film makers controlled by cast
iron scenario system
Socialist Realist Art
inspire the workers
Joyful peasants – Voting
to expel the Kulak from
the collective farm
They are writing about us in Pravda
– happy peasants being read
Pravda
In The Storm Of The Third Year
Of The Five Plan
Sculptures celebrating
the new Moscow ball –
bearing factory and the
Drieper power statopn
Soviet Literature
Isaac Babel, Boris Pasternmak and the
poet Anna Akhmartova – ‘genre of silence’ –
gave up serious writing
Fyodor
Gladkov’s
‘Cement’ – a
novel telling
the story of a
cement
factory worker
Socialist
realism
proclaimed
to be the
basic
principle of
literary
creation
Domestic
Family
Sex/ Relationships
after 1917 rev
looked for
sexual freedom
incest,bigamy,adultery
& male homosexuality
were legalised in '30
made illegal in '36
no resources for the production of contraception
Marriage
wedding rings banned
in '28 allowed in '36
married party members
= priviledges e.g.
spacious accomidation
communist husbands
were to be main earner
of family & could be
expelled if had an affair
Divorce
spiralling divorce rates in urban
areas
avaiability of divorce
limited- june 1936
divorce more complex
& expensive
soviet press hounded men who
deserted wives
Children
Ten years of
compulsory
schooling for
all children.
Core curriculum laid
down: reading, writing,
mathematics, science,
history, geography,
Russian (and for the
national minorities
their native language),
Marxist theory.
State-prescribed textbooks
to be used.
Homework to be a
regular requirement.
Women
Passed a decree in 1936,
reversing Bolshevik social
policy
unregistered
marriages were no
longer recognised,
divorce was made
more difficult, right to
abortion severely
districted, the family
declared to be the
basis of Soviet society
and homosexuality
outlawed
Women were conscripted
into the armed forces, with
two million women in the
Red Army by 1944.
During the Great Patriotic
War, women and children
had to fill the vacant place in
the factories. Work on the
land similarly became an
almost totally female activity
Between
1930 and
1945
women's
pay rates
dropped
Economy
Collectivisation
Success
Everyone was fed
Relieved pressure
on land
Provided workforce
needed for
industrialisation
programme
Wheat production
increased by 33%
Kulaks were destroyed
Introduced modern
equipment to farming
Failure
Kulaks were destroyed
Introduced modern
equipment to farming
Peasants burned crops &
slaughtered 25-30% of
animals
1932-4 famine
killed millions
Most enterprising
peasants had been shot or
deported so other peasants
weren’t very effective with
farming methods
Destroyed culture
& religion
unpopular
The 5 Year Plans
1st FYP – October 1928 to December
1932 2nd FYP – January 1933 to
December 1937 3rd FYP – January
1938 to June 1941 4th FYP – January
1946 to December 1950 5th FYP –
January 1951 to December 1955
The first year plan was a set of
targets that had to be met and didn’t
contain any plan on how to meet
these targets. Local officials and
managers faked there figures to meet
the targets but this resulted in Stalin
creating higher targets. This means
that the data for production in Russia
at this time is very unreliable.
The second and third plans were much
like the first but the targets were more
realistic. Over production occurred in
some parts of the economy and under
production in others. This meant that
parts of industry were held up as they
had to wait for vital supplies.
The party’s control of newspapers, cinema and radio meant
that only a favourable view of the plans. Support for this was
the Stakhanovite movement in 1935 named after Alexei
Stakhanov who mined the most coal in one shift. This was to
inspired people to work harder.