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The terror and cultural coercion of Stalin’s rule made a mockery of the original theories and promises of
communism
The Soviet Union Under Stalin
A Totalitarian State
Stalin’s Five-Year Plans:
Stalin imposed government control over the Soviet Union’s economy.
In 1928, he proposed the first of several “five-year plans”
building heavy industry
improving transportation
increasing farm output.
A Totalitarian State
The Soviet Union developed a command economy
Government officials made all basic economic decisions.
In a capitalist economy, a free market determines most economic decisions.
The private businesses compete to win the consumer’s choice.
This competition regulates the price and quality of goods
Mixed Results in Industry
Government pushed the factory workers and managers by giving bonuses to those who succeeded and punishments for those who failed.
Between 1928 and 1939, large factories, hydroelectric power stations, and huge industrial complexes rose across the Soviet Union.
Oil, coal, and steel production grew.
Mining expanded and new railroads were built.
Forced Collectivization in Agriculture
Stalin brought agriculture under government control
All peasants were to farm on state-owned farms or collectives.
On these collectives the gov’t would provide tractors, fertilizers, and better seed and the peasants would learn modern farm methods.
All farm animals and implements were to be turned over to the collective
Houses and personal belongings could be kept.
Forced Collectivization in Agriculture
Some of the peasants did not want to give up their land or sell their crops at the state’s low prices, so they resisted.
They killed farm animals, destroyed tools, and burned crops.
Stalin believed that kulaks, wealthy farmers, were behind the resistance so he vowed to “liquidate the kulaks as a class”, the gov’t confiscated their land and sent them off to labor camps.
Thousands were killed, or died from being overworked.
Forced Collectivization in Agriculture
Peasants also resisted by growing only enough to live by
So the gov’t took all of the grain and left the peasants to starve.
1932- Terror Famine, 5-8 million people died of starvation in Ukraine alone.
Stalin’s Terror Tactics
Government used tactics such as secret police, torture and violent purges to ensure obedience.
Stalin committed crimes against humanity and constantly violated his people’s rights.
Police spies would open private letters or plant listening devices.
Grumblers or critics were sent to Gulag, a system of brutal labor camps, many died.
No free press, censorship
The Great Purge
1934: Cracked down on Old Bolsheviks( party activists from the early
days of the revolution),
Army heroes
Industrial managers
Writers
Ordinary citizens.
Charged from counterrevolutionary plots, to failure to meet production quotas.
The Great Purge
1936-1938; “show trials” communist leaders would admit to crimes after being tortured or families threatened.
4 million purged, some historians estimate much more
Results of the Purge
Increased Stalin’s power Lost experts in industry, economics,
engineering, writers, thinkers, military leaders, half of it’s military officers
Bites them in the butt when Germany invades USSR. in 1941
Mini Quiz
1. What was the name of Stalin's plan that would build heavy industry, improve transportation, and increasing farm output?
2. What was the name of state-owned farms ran by groups of peasants?
3. Name a tatic used by Stalin to ensure obedience.
Communist Attempts to Control Thought
Propaganda Made himself a god-like figure Censoring opposing ideas, imposing Russian culture
on minorities, and replacing religion with communist ideology.
Loudspeakers in factories and villages, movies, schools, billboards, posters
Communist successes and the evils of capitalism.
Censorship and Acts
Gov’t controlled what books were published, what music was heard, and which works of art were displayed.
Socialist realism – show Soviet life in a positive light and promote hope in the communist future.
Rarely allowed to be realistic
Soviet writers published stories outside their country, or if they refused to conform they were prosecuted.
Russification
Russification – making a nationality’s culture more Russian.
1936- 11 Soviet Socialist Republics
Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic – old Russian heartland and was the largest/dominant republic
At first Stalin promoted independence in the other republics. But in the late 1920s changed his mind and tried to make these non-Russian countries more Russian; appointed Russians to high-ranking positions in non-Russian SSrs and required the Russian language to be used in all schools and businesses.
War on Religion
Atheism- belief that there is no god; became an official state policy.
Many priests and religious leaders were among the purged.
Communism became the new religion with its own ‘sacred texts’.
The writings of Marx and Lenin- shrines, tomb of Lenin, religious icons in home became portraits of Stalin.
Millions still worshipped, both private and public in defiance of the government
Soviet Society Under Stalin
The head of the society was the members of the Communist Party, instead of the old order which were landowning nobles.
Only a fraction of Soviet citizens could join the party, many joined to get ahead not for beliefs.
Soviet elite:
Best apartments, vacation homes, special shops w/ scarce goods
industrial managers, military leaders, scientists, and some artists and writers.
Purges often fell on the elite
Benefits and Drawbacks
Benefits All children attend
communist-built school, technical schools and universities
After-school programs- sports, cultural activities
Free medical care, day care, inexpensive housing, public rec
Drawbacks Political classes to train
teenagers for membership
Also taught communist values, atheism, and love of Stalin.
Entire families in one apartment
Meat and fresh fruit were in short supply
Women in the Soviet Union
Won equality
Gained access to education
A wide range of jobs.
1930s- working in medicine, engineering or the sciences
Worked in factories, in construction, and on collectives
Soviet Forgein Policy
1919- Comintern, the Communist International.
The purpose was to encourage world-wide revolution. Aided revolutionary groups Urged colonies to rise up against mother
country. U.S. “red scare”,
Britain cuts of ties (1926 strike)
Joined league of nations
Looking Ahead
Stalin dies in 1953 USSR is a military superpower A world leader in heavy industry The reality of communism fell far short of Lenin’s
promises
lives of terror far inferior to lives in the west
Mini Quiz
1. What was on of the benefits of communism? 2. What is the word for “making a country
more Russian”? 3. What was on of the topics of the
Comintern?