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  • |'''[[List of leaders of the Soviet Union|Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars]]''' |'''[[Soviet Communist Party]]'''
    37 KB (5,562 words) - 00:37, 26 May 2019
  • ...es, one of the most important innovations of the Russian Formalists. Later Soviet semioticians, such as mikhail bakhtin, who wrote major works on François [
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...a to open a Third Front, Fanon was diagnosed with leukemia. He went to the Soviet Union for treatment and experienced some remission from his illness. On his
    9 KB (1,388 words) - 12:25, 2 March 2021
  • ...gime]] and Against the [[Defence]] of the USSR'', a critique of both the [[Soviet Union]] and its Trotskyist supporters. They suggested that the [[USSR]] was
    2 KB (322 words) - 04:07, 24 May 2019
  • ...be properly read only [[retroactively]], from today's World Wide Web, the Soviet Union provided the first model of the developed "post-property" society, of ...bed into its very core: since the class war is now proclaimed over and the Soviet Union is conceived of as the classless country of the People, those who (ar
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...le]] of the main [[enemy]]; from June 22 1941, when [[Germany]] attacked [[Soviet Union]], it was again the popular front against the Fascist beast), the bru
    52 KB (8,449 words) - 23:27, 23 May 2019
  • ...ention of the liberal psychological individual not take [[place]] in the [[Soviet Union]] in the late 20s and early 30s? The Russian avant-garde art of the e
    28 KB (4,533 words) - 19:44, 27 May 2019
  • ...Other. Like, in the [[good]] old [[joke]] about the [[difference]] between Soviet-style bureaucratic Socialism and the Yugoslav self-management Socialism: in
    54 KB (8,829 words) - 00:46, 21 May 2019
  • ...ally pulled the strings from behind. This is a nice paradox. Even in the [[Soviet Union]] now, the hard-level Russian-nationalist anticommunists try to expla
    21 KB (3,498 words) - 01:13, 25 May 2019
  • ...nvented towards the end of the last century. The ultimate example is the [[Soviet Union]]. [[You May|You may]] think that these nationalist revivals emerged
    19 KB (3,206 words) - 23:30, 24 May 2019
  • ...of Yugoslavia functioned as a [[metaphor]] for what might happen in the [[Soviet Union]]; for [[France]] and Great [[Britain]] it resuscitated the [[phantom
    11 KB (1,769 words) - 06:51, 24 May 2019
  • ...1">1</a></sup>&nbsp; Based on the archives of the Central Committee of the Soviet [[Communist]] Party which were only recently made available to historians, ...t by any means display all the healthy symptoms for the [[development]] of Soviet Symphonic [[Music]]."<sup><a href="#3">3</a></sup>&nbsp; Why, then, use the
    63 KB (10,138 words) - 03:25, 21 May 2019
  • ...ention of the liberal psychological individual not take [[place]] in the [[Soviet Union]] in the late 1920s and early 1930s? The Russian avant-garde art of t
    23 KB (3,562 words) - 00:50, 21 May 2019
  • ...realised, no way for Russia to "[[pass]] directly to socialism". All that Soviet power could do was to combine the moderate politics of "state capitalism" w ...sh. [[Walking]] to his theatre in July 1956, [[Brecht]] passed a column of Soviet tanks rolling towards the Stalinallee to crush the workers' rebellion. He w
    27 KB (4,181 words) - 22:46, 20 May 2019
  • ...fter his death, Morozov was elevated to a cult [[figure]] all around the [[Soviet Union]]. In the [[film]], Stepok, a young village boy, organizes the local ...oris Shumyatsky: The Film Bezhin Meadow," in The Film Factory: Russian and Soviet [[Cinema]] in Documents, trans. Richard Taylor, ed. Taylor and Ian Christie
    75 KB (11,848 words) - 17:15, 27 May 2019
  • ...dgment fails to take into account is the fact that the entire epoch of the Soviet Communism from 1917 (or, more precisely, from Stalin's proclamation of the ...r participation in the trials. One of the Soviet explanations was that, in Soviet Union, the most highly developed country in the history of humanity, childr
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...who heroically persisted in their belief in Communism and support for the Soviet Union.<br><br> ...the essential goodness of Man; in the truly [[human]] [[character]] of the Soviet [[regime]]) sublime, is the very gap between it and the overwhelming factua
    23 KB (3,928 words) - 03:32, 21 May 2019
  • ...e is thus an unexpected truth in the old cynical wisdom from the Stalinist Soviet Union: "he lies as an eye-witness!"<br><br> ...paradox in the state Socialist regimes: when, in a [[mythical]] scene from Soviet hagiography, [[Stalin]] takes a walk in the fields, meets there a [[driver]
    52 KB (8,901 words) - 20:26, 20 May 2019
  • ...racies put it in February 2003. The United States is now, as the defunct [[Soviet Union]] was decades ago, the subversive [[agent]] of a world revolution.
    18 KB (2,898 words) - 01:02, 25 May 2019
  • ...assionate and arguably worst book, a strangely neutral [[analysis]] of the Soviet [[ideology]] with no clear commitments; and, finally, attempts by some Habe ...lines, it was also clear to perceptive dissidents like [[Havel]] that the Soviet [[intervention]] in a way saved the [[myth]] of the Prague Spring of '68, i
    55 KB (8,847 words) - 23:21, 24 May 2019
  • ...Kingsley Amis’s novel <em>Russian Hide-and-Seek</em>, which is set in a Soviet-occupied [[Britain]]. * [[soviet Union]]
    10 KB (1,507 words) - 00:38, 26 May 2019
  • ...ll its [[horror]]s were merely copies of those already perpetrated under [[Soviet]] [[Communism]]. Nolte’s idea is that [[Communism]] and [[Nazism]] share ...</em> (1958), his least passionate book, a strangely neutral analysis of [[Soviet]] [[ideology]] with no clear commitments; and, finally, in the 1980s, the a
    11 KB (1,613 words) - 14:42, 12 November 2006
  • ...one of hypocrisy and [[arbitrary]] terror, in the late Thirties the great Soviet [[films]] (say, the Gorky trilogy) epitomised authentic solidarity for audi
    35 KB (5,668 words) - 18:54, 27 May 2019
  • ...rious [[about]] Stalinism to the extent that he regarded the utopia of the Soviet Union under Stalin, and the willingness to purge unsupportive elements in t
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 17:57, 27 May 2019
  • ...neral Secretary of the Central Committee of the [[Communist]] Party of the Soviet Union (1922-1953), a [[position]] which had later become that of party lead
    613 bytes (83 words) - 02:02, 25 May 2019
  • ...e [[enemy]] to a more [[aggression|aggressive]] stance. Like the defunct [[Soviet Union]] decades ago, the [[United States]] is now the country subversively
    8 KB (1,313 words) - 14:53, 12 November 2006
  • ...the Day, the explosion of national independence and the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] - no wonder the novel is a clear failure, contrived and ridiculousl
    13 KB (2,091 words) - 23:23, 24 May 2019
  • ...eral damage' that generates the accidental side-profit. In one of the anti-Soviet [[jokes]] popular after the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in [[1968]], a fairy-queen
    22 KB (3,529 words) - 18:45, 27 May 2019
  • ...tead of immediately shooting Bond, the villain gives Bond kind of an old [[Soviet Union]] socialist tour, showing him the plant and how it works. Of course i ...lah, end of liberal capitalism. Then you have Marcuse's very strange book, Soviet [[Marxism]], which is totally dispassionate and very strange. Then you have
    64 KB (10,850 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...eak through to the East of the Volga and to the Caucasus oil fields, the [[Soviet Union]] would collapse and [[Germany]] would have won the war; if Erich von
    1 KB (208 words) - 01:56, 21 May 2019
  • ...ention of the liberal psychological individual not take [[place]] in the [[Soviet Union]] in the late 20s and early 30s? The Russian avant-garde art of the e
    28 KB (4,521 words) - 19:45, 27 May 2019
  • ...e nearest American equivalent to the proud socialist-realist images of the Soviet epoch? Bond's role, of course, is to escape and blow up the whole assemblag ...Life of Ivan Denisovich</i>, a novella that depicted for the first time in Soviet literature daily life in a gulag (its publication had to be cleared by Niki
    22 KB (3,584 words) - 14:56, 12 November 2006
  • For a [[citizen]] of the defunct [[Soviet Union]], the notion of a forbidden Zone gives rise to (at least) five [[ass ...ty of the real, censorship was thus much stronger in Hollywood than in the Soviet Union.
    61 KB (9,960 words) - 02:15, 21 May 2019
  • ...ally pulled the strings from behind. This is a nice paradox. Even in the [[Soviet Union]] now, the hard-level Russian-nationalist anticommunists try to expla
    22 KB (3,750 words) - 01:12, 25 May 2019
  • ...nvented towards the end of the last century. The ultimate example is the [[Soviet Union]]. [[You May|You may]] think that these nationalist revivals emerged
    20 KB (3,252 words) - 23:29, 24 May 2019
  • ...ention of the liberal psychological individual not take [[place]] in the [[Soviet Union]] in the late 20s and early 30s? The Russian avant-garde art of the e
    28 KB (4,534 words) - 19:46, 27 May 2019
  • ...t we can glimpse in these writings is Lenin-in-becoming: not yet Lenin-the-Soviet-institution, but Lenin thrown into an open, contingent situation. 1917 writ
    2 KB (283 words) - 20:24, 14 June 2007
  • ...he fairly tolerant late 1970s who wanted to collect some of the best-known Soviet dissident writing. "The party line fluctuated so much that the Central Comm
    35 KB (5,651 words) - 23:13, 27 May 2019
  • ...sing the rebirth of "nations" that had disappeared into [[Germany]], the [[Soviet Union]], or, in the [[case]] of Slovenia, first the Austro-Hungarian [[Empi
    31 KB (5,130 words) - 23:54, 24 May 2019
  • ...philosopher from Eastern Germany, whose early years were influenced by the Soviet Union, carries a certain amount of paranoia'. This characterisation neatly ...le of sitting eating strawberry cakes in Prague in 1968 while watching the Soviet tanks deal with the demonstrators.<a name="69x"></a><a href="#69"><sup>69</
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • ...ge Apostles]] and friend of some of those involved in the [[Cambridge Five|Soviet-Cambridge spy ring]], was the publisher of the Brady articles, and that the
    39 KB (5,735 words) - 03:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...ocialism]] rejected both [[Capitalism|Western capitalism]] and [[Communism|Soviet communism]], which he saw as dehumanizing and bureaucratic social [[structu
    12 KB (1,673 words) - 06:42, 24 May 2019
  • ...with its main avenues of coercion &mdash; the [[Warsaw Pact]] led by the [[Soviet Union|USSR]] and [[NATO]] led by the [[United States]] &mdash; often appear ...uropean cultural area took over in the twentieth century (United States, [[Soviet Union]]).
    11 KB (1,560 words) - 23:19, 24 May 2019
  • ...ess]] in gentiles. These writers adopted what eventually became a favorite Soviet tactic against [[dissidents]]: anyone whose [[political]] views were differ
    82 KB (13,178 words) - 17:18, 27 May 2019
  • ...tead of immediately shooting Bond, the villain gives Bond kind of an old [[Soviet Union]] socialist tour, showing him the plant and how it works. Of course i ...lah, end of liberal capitalism. Then you have Marcuse's very strange book, Soviet [[Marxism]], which is totally dispassionate, very strange. Then you have so
    46 KB (7,621 words) - 00:50, 21 May 2019
  • ...to break through to the East of Volga and to the Caucasus oil fields, the Soviet Union would collapse and Germany would have won the war; IF Erich von Manhe ...ing detail is the extraordinary popularity that the snipers enjoyed in the Soviet media: snipers were Stakhanovite workers transposed onto the battlefield; t
    33 KB (5,521 words) - 23:09, 24 May 2019
  • ..." The interpretation is surprisingly reminiscent of an old [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[joke]]: "Did [[Rabinovitch]] win a new car on the [[state]] lottery?"
    14 KB (2,227 words) - 08:01, 24 May 2019
  • ...United States and an antipsychoanalytic movement was taking place in the [[Soviet Union]] (where Freud's work represented a facet of National Socialist ideol
    27 KB (3,702 words) - 08:33, 24 May 2019
  • ...ut the latter is not, for him, the form of the state found in the former [[Soviet Union]]: “Dictatorship of the proletariat is a necessary oxymoron, not a
    12 KB (1,742 words) - 20:38, 27 May 2019
  • ...at they were part of an international US-[[Jewish]] conspiracy to kill the Soviet leadership. <ref>Jonathan Brent and Vladimir P. Naumov, ''Stalin's Last Cri ...'s The [[Philosophy]] Steamer, a book [[about]] the [[expulsion]] from the Soviet Union in 1921 of the group of most exposed non-[[Marxist]] intellectuals, a
    60 KB (9,765 words) - 23:51, 20 May 2019
  • ...ated into the embodiment of the people's [[global]] [[rejection]] of the [[Soviet Union|Communist regime]], so that all different versions of the [[anti-Comm
    72 KB (11,294 words) - 17:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...ess]] in gentiles. These writers adopted what eventually became a favorite Soviet tactic against [[dissidents]]: anyone whose [[political]] views were differ
    67 KB (10,603 words) - 17:16, 27 May 2019
  • ...tem in collapse, etc. But I've talked with a lot of people from the former Soviet Union and, recently, from Serbia, and I think that the political [[processe ...can rely is falling apart in Serbia, and, at a different level, in the ex-Soviet Union. One of the things that struck me in Moscow today is that the locals
    41 KB (6,846 words) - 02:12, 21 May 2019
  • ...o the university as a social institution-for example, he states that the [[Soviet Union]] was the pure reign of university discourse. Consequently, not only
    31 KB (4,756 words) - 20:39, 25 May 2019
  • ...aurice [[Merleau-Ponty]] write ''Humanism and Terror'', his defense of the Soviet [[Communism]] as involving a kind of Pascalean wager that announces the top
    46 KB (7,077 words) - 19:04, 27 May 2019
  • ...1946, Maurice Merleau-Ponty wrote Humanism and Terror, his defense of the Soviet Communism as involving a kind of Pascalean wager that announces the topic o ...r" of imposing a new order onto daily life, that the Jacobins and both the Soviet revolution and the Chinese revolution ultimately failed - not for the lack
    87 KB (14,415 words) - 18:46, 14 June 2007
  • ...ext, "The Russo-Chinese Debate and the Dialectic" (1960), a comment on the Soviet-Chinese conflict: ...distrustful towards the peasants, they saw as one of the main tasks of the Soviet power to break the inertia of the peasants, their substantial attachment to
    81 KB (13,226 words) - 20:04, 14 June 2007
  • ...ar war we were during a naval skirmish between an American destroyer and a Soviet B-59 submarine off Cuba on October 27 1962. The destroyer dropped depth cha
    47 KB (7,661 words) - 20:02, 27 May 2019
  • ...e an "[[objective]]" definition of <i>kulak</i>: "The grounds given in one Soviet comment are that 'the old attitudes of a <i>kulak</i> have almost disappear
    17 KB (2,645 words) - 08:44, 24 May 2019
  • ...h the official demands for the easy-to-listen music accessible to ordinary Soviet people.<br><br> ...erformed /.../. Beneath the endless fanfares trumpeting the triumph of the Soviet state in the finale, /.../ the audience must have felt its sadness /.../ an
    19 KB (3,244 words) - 17:00, 12 January 2008
  • ...not arrive at its addressee, but, this [[time]], because it was not sent. Soviet missiles were stationed in Cuba as the result of the [[secret]] mutual secu ...the US will not invade Cuba, in [[exchange]] for the [[withdrawal]] of the Soviet missiles from Cuba.)<br><br>
    16 KB (2,563 words) - 00:41, 24 May 2019
  • ...ned inwards and began once again to reshape violently the [[structure]] of Soviet society. Forcible industrialization and collectivization were now substitut ...Unitarians dared to dream. The same logic was at work in the crisis of the Soviet Union of the second half of the 1920s: in 1927, the ruling coalition of Sta
    34 KB (5,320 words) - 00:39, 26 May 2019
  • ...0s, giving us snippets of the NEP ("new economic politics") reality of the Soviet Union. Recall the common expression "to cast an eye over something," with i
    71 KB (12,109 words) - 17:48, 12 January 2008
  • ...d revolution receded into the distance, new paths had to be charted if the Soviet state was to survive.
    2 KB (386 words) - 11:40, 1 July 2019
  • ...nd]] what is [[left]] of the [[left-wing]] [[tradition]] after the fall of Soviet communism. They confront disincentives to [[active]] democratic [[participa
    2 KB (235 words) - 05:21, 24 May 2019
  • ...epoch: in 1815, the final defeat of Napoleon; and in 1989, the fall of the Soviet Union. But the revolutions of 1848 proclaimed for a century and a half the
    1,011 bytes (156 words) - 16:57, 11 April 2019
  • ...uniquely defend what is left of the left-wing tradition after the fall of Soviet communism. They confront disincentives to active democratic participation t
    3 KB (434 words) - 13:50, 7 June 2019
  • ...uniquely defend what is left of the left-wing tradition after the fall of Soviet communism. They confront disincentives to active democratic participation t
    3 KB (454 words) - 13:36, 7 June 2019
  • ...d revolution receded into the distance, new paths had to be charted if the Soviet state was to survive.
    2 KB (334 words) - 11:38, 1 July 2019
  • ...t we can glimpse in these writings is Lenin-in-becoming: not yet Lenin-the-Soviet-institution, but Lenin thrown into an open, contingent situation.<br /><br
    2 KB (340 words) - 04:25, 7 June 2019
  • ...uniquely defend what is left of the left-wing tradition after the fall of Soviet communism. They confront disincentives to active democratic participation t
    2 KB (282 words) - 20:44, 28 June 2019
  • ...d revolution receded into the distance, new paths had to be charted if the Soviet state was to survive.
    2 KB (262 words) - 11:19, 1 July 2019
  • ...t we can glimpse in these writings is Lenin-in-becoming: not yet Lenin-the-Soviet-institution, but Lenin thrown into an open, contingent situation.In ''Revo
    1 KB (205 words) - 20:58, 28 June 2019
  • ...” in which he rebuts claims of Communism’s death after the fall of the Soviet Union.
    2 KB (281 words) - 02:43, 15 July 2019
  • ...epoch: in 1815, the final defeat of Napoleon; and in 1989, the fall of the Soviet Union. But the revolutions of 1848 proclaimed for a century and a half the
    1 KB (195 words) - 02:44, 15 July 2019
  • =‘The Anti-Sexus: A new device for the Soviet market’ by Andrei Platonov=
    1 KB (147 words) - 02:17, 20 July 2019
  • '''Jodi Dean unshackles the communist ideal from the failures of the Soviet Union.'''
    1 KB (191 words) - 00:15, 15 July 2019
  • ...ring the October 1917 revolution in Russia, and he subsequently headed the Soviet state until 1924, bringing stability to the region and establishing a socia
    2 KB (266 words) - 00:15, 15 July 2019
  • ...y his pupil Grahame Lock, which considers at length the lessons it sees in Soviet experience for contemporary communism.
    2 KB (224 words) - 00:15, 15 July 2019
  • ...Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” and propaganda epics from Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia all inform Žižek’s stimulating, provocative and often hilarious
    2 KB (214 words) - 00:43, 20 July 2019
  • .... We can call 'Stalinism' the substitution, pronounced on the basis of the Soviet State's position of power, of entities of this sort (Working Class, Party,
    30 KB (4,869 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...nics of theatrical spectacle; as an exposition of the tyranny practised by Soviet Communism; as an examination of the enduring power of dissent in the face o ...o turn around Lenin's reading of the situation: he presented the fact that Soviet Union remained alone as a unique chance to build socialism in one country.
    21 KB (3,430 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...his key essay 'On the problem of the Beautiful in Soviet Art' (1950), the Soviet critic G. Nedoshivin claimed:
    34 KB (5,706 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...f his activity, i.e., it was inscribed into the very immanent logic of the Soviet Communism. (Let us take an extreme case of the gap that separates ''Handlun
    75 KB (12,207 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...To the state bureaucrat's objection: "But nothing will ever change in the Soviet Union! Socialism is here to stay forever!" Rabinovitch calmly answers: "Thi
    73 KB (11,585 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...annulled because ''it never was a true marriage''. And the same holds for Soviet Communism: it is clearly insufficient to say that, in the years of Brezhnev
    86 KB (13,956 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019