Results 301 to 310 of about 259,658 (343)
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Claims and Realities of Soviet Socialism

Russian Review, 1952
T HE representatives of the Communist Party and the Soviet press have declared that socialism in the U.S.S.R. has been victorious. The explanatory memorandum published in Soviet newspapers on January 30, 1939, simultaneously with the theses of an economic program for the future, proclaimed: "We have fully adopted a socialist system. . . .
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The Soviet Union in the American Perspective: Perceptions and Realities

The Adelphi Papers, 1982
Schizophrenia is defined, in part, as ‘a psychotic disorder characterized by loss of contact with the environment and … expressed as a disorder of feeling, thought or conduct’. This approximates to the attitude of the United States toward Russian Communism, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Soviet State.
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The rule of reality and the reality of the rule (on Soviet ideology and its “shift”)

Studies in East European Thought, 2021
The present article is a critical engagement with Aleksei Yurchak’s Everything Was Forever until It Was No More: The Last Soviet Generation. It contends that, as rich as Yurchak’s insights on the language culture of Brezhnev’s Stagnation have proven to be, his account ends up seriously misrepresenting the Stalinist episode in the life of Soviet ...
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The Reality of the Soviet Managem.ent Model

1994
Abstract In 1949, the Chinese Communists looked toward the Soviet Union for ideas and even a blueprint for China’s socialist transformation. As discussed in the last chapter, the CCP chose to study the Soviets’ post­ war recovery model, which seemed to provide an answer to China’s immediate needs and to fulfill two other important ...
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Glinka in Soviet and Post-Soviet Historiography: Myths, Realities and Ideologies

2017
The advent of glasnost’ prompted a reassessment of many aspects of Russia’s musical past, especially in regard of key figures such as the composer Mikhail Glinka. The revisionism that swept Glinka scholarship in Russia itself thereafter promised much: new and better understanding of Glinka and his music, investigation of previously forbidden topics and
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The Soviet Threat: Myths and Realities

International Affairs, 1979
Robert M. Slusser   +2 more
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Western Perceptions and Soviet Realities

This chapter evaluates the letter sent in October 1975 to the World Council of Churches (WCC) by Father Gleb Yakunin and an Orthodox layperson, Lev Regel'son, which changed the Western response to religious persecution in the Soviet Union. Although earlier letters from individual religious believers had largely been set aside, the delegates at the WCC ...
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Soviet Law and Soviet Reality

Russian Review, 1986
George G. Weickhardt, Olimpiad S. Ioffe
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