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Historiography in the Soviet Union

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File:The Commissar Vanishes.jpeg
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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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.

Soviet historiography is the study of the study of history in Soviet Union and its sphere of influence (see Eastern bloc). Differently from history research in democratic countries, in Soviet Union, the state-approved history was openly subjected to politics and propaganda (see also agitprop). These trends have been brilliantly analysed by George Orwell in his classic work, Nineteen Eighty-Four (see also Ministry of Truth).

Translations of foreign historiography were often produced in a truncated form, accompanied with extensive corrective footnotes. E.g. in the Russian 1976 translation of Basil Liddell Hart's History of the Second World War pre-war purges of Red Army officers, secret protocol to theMolotov-Ribbentrop Pact, many details of the Winter War, occupation of Baltic states, Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Allied assistance to the Soviet Union during the war, many other Western Alles' efforts, the Soviet leadership's mistakes and failures, criticism of the Soviet Union and other content were censored out.

References

  1. The Commissar vanishes (The Newseum)
  2. 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.

See also

Sources and further reading

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