The Politics of Russian Memory: The Great War in the European Context

被引:0
|
作者
Porshneva, Olga S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Ural Fed Univ, Dept Theory & Hist Int Relat, 19 Mira St, Ekaterinburg 620002, Russia
基金
俄罗斯科学基金会;
关键词
World War I; Russia; Europe; politics of memory; historical memory; anniversaries;
D O I
10.22363/2312-8674-2021-20-2-216-235
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
This article examines how the historical memory of World War I emerged and developed in Russia, and also compares it to how Europeans have thought about the conflict. The author argues that the politics of memory differed during the Soviet and post-Soviet periods. In the wake of the 1917 Revolution, Bolshevik efforts to "re-format" the memory of the Great War were part of its attempt to create a new society and new man. At the same time, the regime used it to mobilize society for the impending conflict with the 'imperialist' powers. The key actors that sought to inculcate the notion of the war with imperialism into Soviet mass consciousness were the Central Committee of the Bolshevik Communist Party, the Department of Agitation and Propaganda, and, in particular, the Red Army and Comintern. The latter two worked together to organize the major campaigns dedicated to war anniversaries, which were important both to reinforce the concept of imperialist war as well as to involve the masses in public commemorations, rituals and practices. The Soviet state also relied on organizations of war veterans to promote such commemorative practices while suppressing any alter-native narratives. The article goes on to explain how, under Stalin, the government began to change the way it portrayed the Great War in the mid-1930s. And after the Second World War, Soviet politics of memory differed greatly from those in the West. In the USSR the Great Patriotic War was sacralized, while the earlier conflict remained a symbol of unjust imperialist wars.
引用
收藏
页码:216 / 235
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Ruthchild, Rochelle Goldberg
    [J]. ASPASIA, 2015, 9 (01): : 157 - 161
  • [2] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Lohr, Eric
    [J]. RUSSIAN REVIEW, 2013, 72 (01): : 161 - 162
  • [3] The Great War in the Russian Memory
    Sumpf, Alexandre
    [J]. CAHIERS DU MONDE RUSSE, 2011, 52 (04) : 731 - 734
  • [4] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Brunstedt, Jonathan
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HISTORY, 2013, 48 (01) : 207 - 209
  • [5] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Corney, Frederick
    [J]. SLAVIC REVIEW, 2012, 71 (04) : 942 - 943
  • [6] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Stolarski, Christopher
    [J]. CANADIAN SLAVONIC PAPERS, 2012, 54 (3-4) : 552 - 554
  • [7] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Morton, Jason R.
    [J]. LABORATORIUM-RUSSIAN REVIEW OF SOCIAL RESEARCH, 2015, 7 (03): : 185 - 187
  • [8] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Retish, Aaron B.
    [J]. SOVIET AND POST SOVIET REVIEW, 2013, 40 (01): : 153 - 154
  • [9] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Scherr, Barry P.
    [J]. SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL, 2013, 57 (01): : 112 - 113
  • [10] The Great War in Russian Memory
    Johnson, Sam
    [J]. AB IMPERIO-STUDIES OF NEW IMPERIAL HISTORY AND NATIONALISM IN THE POST-SOVIET SPACE, 2014, (02): : 444 - 447