Historiography in the Soviet Union: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes.jpeg|right|300px|thumb|The book ''[[The Commissar Vanishes]]'' by [[David King]] discusses [[falsification]] of historic photos in [[Soviet Union]] in depth, with numerous examples. Some of them can be seen on this cover.]] |
[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes.jpeg|right|300px|thumb|The book ''[[The Commissar Vanishes]]'' by [[David King]] discusses [[falsification]] of historic photos in [[Soviet Union]] in depth, with numerous examples. Some of them can be seen on this cover.]] |
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[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes 1.jpg|thumb|right|Before 1940]] |
[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes 1.jpg|thumb|right|Before 1940]] |
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[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes 2.jpg|thumb|right|After: [[NKVD|People's Commissar for the Interior]] [[Nikolai Yezhov]], the young man strolling with [[Stalin]] to his left, was shot in 1940. He was edited out from a photo by Soviet censors.<ref>[http://www.newseum.org/berlinwall/commissar_vanishes/vanishes.htm The Commissar vanishes] (The Newseum)</ref>]] |
[[Image:The Commissar Vanishes 2.jpg|thumb|right|After: [[NKVD|People's Commissar for the Interior]] [[Nikolai Yezhov]], the young man strolling with [[Stalin]] to his left, was shot in 1940. He was edited out from a photo by Soviet censors.<ref>[http://www.newseum.org/berlinwall/commissar_vanishes/vanishes.htm The Commissar vanishes] (The Newseum)</ref>]] |
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The historic scholarship produced in the [[Soviet Union]] was frequently compromised as it had to comply with the [[Soviet]] [[ideology]]. While the degree of the ideological control over the historic scholarship varied in different periods of the [[Soviet Union]]'s [[history of the Soviet Union|history]], Soviet [[historiography]] (and Soviet scholarship in general) was affected by [[Censorship in the Soviet Union|censorship]] and forced adherence to the [[party line]] and [[Marxist]] theories. Soviet scholars were constricted in their research, as research into many areas of history was forbidden or could not diverge from certain assumptions and conclusions; Soviet scholars were also denied access to some parts of the international body of knowledge, as many works of non-Soviet historians were forbidden or censored. |
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==Criticism== |
==Criticism== |
Revision as of 19:21, 20 September 2007
The neutrality of this article is disputed. |
This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. |
The historic scholarship produced in the Soviet Union was frequently compromised as it had to comply with the Soviet ideology. While the degree of the ideological control over the historic scholarship varied in different periods of the Soviet Union's history, Soviet historiography (and Soviet scholarship in general) was affected by censorship and forced adherence to the party line and Marxist theories. Soviet scholars were constricted in their research, as research into many areas of history was forbidden or could not diverge from certain assumptions and conclusions; Soviet scholars were also denied access to some parts of the international body of knowledge, as many works of non-Soviet historians were forbidden or censored.
Criticism
Party line
Historians are dangerous and capable of turning everything upside down. They have to be watched.
Nikita Khrushchev, First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1956[2]
Soviet historiography had been severely criticized by various scholars, chiefly — but not only; see also samizdat — outside Soviet Union, with its very status as scholarly called into question, and described as ideology and pseudoscience.[3] Such powerful criticism stems from the fact that in the Soviet Union, science was far from independent. Critics had pointed out many faults of Soviet historiography: since the late 1930s, it treated the party line and reality as one and the same.[4] As such, if it was a science - it was a science in service of a specific political and ideological agenda, commonly employing historical revisionism.[5] In the 1930s, historic archives were closed, original research sereverely restricted. Many historians turned virtually into propagandists with academic credentials. They were required to pepper their works with references — appropriate or not — to Stalin and other "Marxist-Leninist classics", and to pass judgment — as prescribed by the Party — on pre-revolution historic Russian figures.[6]
The state-approved history was openly subjected to politics and propaganda, similar to philosophy, art, and many fields of scientific research.[2] The Party could not be proven wrong, it was infallible and reality was to conform to this line. Any non-conformist history had to be erased, and questioning of the official history was illegal.[2]
Many works of Western historians were forbidden or censored, many areas of history were also forbidden for research as, officially, they never happened.[2] As such, it remained mostly outside the international historiography of the period.[3] Translations of foreign historiography were often produced in a truncated form, accompanied with extensive censorship and corrective footnotes. For example, in the Russian 1976 translation of Basil Liddell Hart's History of the Second World War pre-war purges of Red Army officers, the secret protocol to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, many details of the Winter War, the occupation of the Baltic states, the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Allied assistance to the Soviet Union during the war, many other Western Allies' efforts, the Soviet leadership's mistakes and failures, criticism of the Soviet Union and other content were censored out.[7]
The official version of Soviet history has been dramatically changed after every major governmental shake-up. Previous leaders were always denounced as "enemies", whereas current leaders were usually a subject of a personality cult. Textbooks were rewritten periodically, with figures - such as Lev Trotsky or Stalin himself - disappearing from their pages or being turned from great figures to great villains.[8][2]
Certain regions and periods of history were made unreliable for political reasons. Entire historical events could be erased, if they did not fit the party line. For example, until 1989 the Soviet leadership and historians, unlike their Western colleagues, had denied the existence of a secret protocol to the Soviet-German Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939, and as a result the Soviet approach to the study of the Soviet-German relations before 1941 and the origins of World War II were remarkably flawed.[9] In another example, the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 as well as the Polish-Soviet War of 1919-1920 were censored out or minimized from most publications, and research suppressed, in order to enforce the policy of 'Polish-Soviet friendship'.[2] Similarly, the tragedies of enforced collectivisation, the wholesale deportations or massacres of small nationalities in the Caucasus or the disappearance of the Crimean Tatars are not recognized as facts worth of mention.[2]
Marxism influence
The problems of Soviet historiography are the problems of our Communist ideology.
Anna Pankratova, Soviet academician, 1956[5]
Another major factor influencing its unreliability was that the Soviet interpretation of Marxism predetermined the research done by historians.[3][2]
The Marxist theory identified means of production as chief determinants of the historical process. They led to the creation of social classes, and class struggle was the 'motor' of history. Hence the sociocultural evolution of societies had to progress inevitably from slavery, through feudalism and capitalism to socialism. All research had to be based on those assumptions and could not diverge in its findings.[2]
The Marxist bias has been criticized, for example, for assigning to the Roman rebellions the characteristics of the social revolution, or for errors in comparing the recent developments in Russia with those in the Western countries (for example, Soviet Union mostly "skipped" the period of capitalism required by Marxist theory before the period of communism can be reached).[2][3]
Often, the Marxist bias and propaganda demands mixed: hence the peasant rebellions against the early Soviet rule were simply ignored - as inconvenient politically and contradicting the Marxist theories.[4] The Kronstadt rebellion, for example, was one of many events that, according to Soviet historiography, simply never happened.[2]
Soviet historians
Mikhail Pokrovsky (1862-1932) was held in highest repute as a historian in the Soviet Union and was elected to the Soviet Academy of Sciences in 1929. He emphasized Marxist theory, downplaying the role of personality in favour of economics as the driving force of history. However, posthumously, Pokrovsky was accused of "vulgar sociologism", and his books were banned. After Stalin's death, and the subsequent renouncement of his policies during the Khrushchev Thaw, Pokrovsky's work regained some influence.
Credibility
Not all areas of Soviet historiography were equally affected by the ideological sturdiness and the regime's sturdiness itself varied considerably over time. The degree of the ideologization of different areas of historic science varied as well. Therefore, despite part of the Soviet historiography being affected by extreme ideological bias, and compromised by the deliberate distortions and omissions, it has produced a large body of significant scholarship which continues to be used in the modern research.[10]
Influences on popular culture
These trends have been most famously portrayed by George Orwell in his classic dystopia, Nineteen Eighty-Four (see also Ministry of Truth).
Another notable criticism was delivered by Victor Suvorov in his book "The Liberator" [8]. He said that "Vladimir Lenin was an enemy", because all his friends were proven to be enemy of the people by the Soviet courts, which are the most democratic and just in the world. The enemies were Lev Trotsky, Nikolai Bukharin, Alexei Rykov, and Karl Radek. It was Lenin who brought these "wrecklers" to power, so that brave chekists had to kill them all with bullets or ice axes. "Stalin was also an enemy", "as has been proven to the entire world at the historical 20th Congress of the Communist Party". Of course, "Stalin himself destroyed thousands of enemies and spies from his closest surrounding, but he could not exterminate them all", so that his "closest friend Lavrenty Beria and his notorious gang have been executed only after Stalin". Sadly enough, Khrushev, who got rid of Beria, turned out to be a traitor, just like his successor Leonid Brezhnev, who was guilty of terrible corruption.
References
- ^ The Commissar vanishes (The Newseum)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ferro, Marc (2003). The Use and Abuse of History: Or How the Past Is Taught to Children. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415285926. See Chapters 8 Aspects and variations of Soviet history and 10 History in profile: Poland.
- ^ a b c d Gwidon Zalejko, Soviet historiography as "normal science", in Historiography Between Modernism and Postmodernism, Jerzy Topolski (ed.), Rodopi, 1994, ISBN 9051837216, Google Print, p.179-191.
- ^ a b Taisia Osipova, Peasant rebellions: Origin, Scope, Design and Consequences, in Vladimir N. Brovkin (ed.), The Bolsheviks in Russian Society: The Revolution and the Civil Wars, Yale University Press, 1997, ISBN 0300067062. Google Print, p.154-176
- ^ a b Roger D. Markwick, Donald J. Raleigh, Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography, Palgrave Macmillan, 2001, ISBN 0333792092, Google Print, p.4-5
- ^ John L. H. Keep: A History of the Soviet Union 1945-1991: Last of the Empires, pages 30–31
- ^ Lewis, B. E. (1977). Soviet Taboo. Review of Vtoraya Mirovaya Voina, History of the Second World War by B. Liddel Gart (Russian translation). Soviet Studies 29 (4), 603-606.
- ^ a b The Liberators (Освободитель), 1981, Hamish Hamilton Ltd, ISBN 0-241-10675-3; cited from Russian edition of 1999, ISBN 5-237-03557-4, pages 13-16
- ^ Bidlack, Richard (1990). Review of Voprosy istorii i istoriografii Velikoi otechestvennoi voiny by I. A. Rosenko, G. L. Sovolev. Slavic Review 49 (4), 653-654.
- ^ Hannes Heer, Klaus Naumann, War Of Extermination: The German Military In World War II, Berghahn Books, 2004, ISBN 1571812326, Google Print, p.304
See also
- Agitprop (Soviet propaganda)
- Censorship in the Soviet Union
- Suppressed research in the Soviet Union
Further reading
- Lietuvos istorijos metraštis: From sovietology to Soviet history: three trends in Western historiography by Dalia Marcinkevičienė
- National Review January 18, 1993: Soviet historiography, western journalism — western journalists slow to report General Dmitri Volkogonov's explanation of his exoneration of convicted spy Alger Hiss by Amos Perlmutter
- Avrich, Paul H. (1960). The Short Course and Soviet Historiography. Political Science Quarterly 75 (4), 539-553.
- Enteen, George M. (1976). Marxists versus Non-Marxists: Soviet Historiography in the 1920s. Slavic Review 35 (1), 91-110.
- Gefter, M. J. & V. L. Malkov (1967) Reply to a Questionnaire on Soviet Historiography. History and Theory 6 (2), 180-207.
- Ito Takayuki (ed.), Facing up to the Past: Soviet Historiography under Perestroika. Sapporo: Hokkaido University, 1989.
- Keep, John (ed.),Contemporary History in the Soviet Mirror. N.Y. – London: Praeger, 1964.
- Markwick, Roger D. Rewriting History in Soviet Russia: The Politics of Revisionist Historiography, 1956-1974. N.Y.: Palgrave, 2001.
- Mazour, Anatole G. & Herman E. Bateman (1952). Recent Conflicts in Soviet Historiography. The Journal of Modern History 24 (1), 56-68.
- Mazour, Anatole G. The Writing of History in the Soviet Union. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1971.
- McCann, James M. (1984). Beyond the Bug: Soviet Historiography of the Soviet-Polish War of 1920. Soviet Studies 36 (4), 475-493.
- Asher, Harvey (1972). The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of M. N. Pokrovsky. Russian Review 31 (1), 49-63.
- Baron, Samuel H. (1974). The Resurrection of Plekhanovism in Soviet Historiography. Russian Review 33 (4), 386-404.
- Daniels, Robert V. (1967). Soviet Historians Prepare for the Fiftieth. Slavic Review 26 (1), 113-118.
- Eissenstat, Bernard W. (1969). M. N. Pokrovsky and Soviet Historiography: Some Reconsiderations. Slavic Review 28 (4), 604-618.
- Enteen, George M. (1969). Soviet Historians Review Their Own Past: The Rehabilitation of M. N. Pokrovsky. Soviet Studies 20 (3), 306-320.
- Enteen, George M. (1970). Pokrovsky's Rehabilitation: A Reply to Bernard W. Eissenstat. Soviet Studies 22 (2), 295-297.
- McNeal, Robert H. (1958). Soviet Historiography on the October Revolution: A Review of Forty Years. American Slavic and East European Review 17 (3), 269-281.
- Schlesinger, Rudolf (1950). Recent Soviet Historiography. II. Soviet Studies 2 (1), 3-21.
- Schlesinger, Rudolf (1950). Recent Soviet Historiography. III. Soviet Studies 2 (2), 138-162.
- Schlesinger, Rudolf (1950). Recent Soviet Historiography. I. Soviet Studies 1 (4), 293-312.
- Schlesinger, Rudolf (1951). Note on Recent Soviet Historiography, Part IV. Soviet Studies 3 (1), 64.
- Shapiro, Jane P. (1968). Soviet Historiography and the Moscow Trials: After Thirty Years. Russian Review 27 (1), 68-77.
- Barber, John. Soviet Historians in Crisis, 1928-1932.
- Pundeff, Marin. History in the USSR. Selected Readings.
- Shteppa, Konstantin F. Russian Historians and the Soviet State.
- Black, C. E. Rewriting Russian History. Soviet Interpretations of Russia's Past.
- Nancy Whittier Heer. Politics and History in the Soviet Union