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Две революции, две составные части политического инакомыслия эпохи «оттепели»

The Two Revolutions and Two Component Parts of Political Dissent of the "Thaw" Period
[journal article]

Kozlov, Dmitry S.

Abstract

Independent social life of the "Thaw” period is less examined then dissidents' resistance of the 1970s or mass public actions of Perestroika years. Analysis of the 1950-1960s protest actions allows us to trace changes in independent political projects in post-Stalin USSR. Unsolved social and economi... view more

Independent social life of the "Thaw” period is less examined then dissidents' resistance of the 1970s or mass public actions of Perestroika years. Analysis of the 1950-1960s protest actions allows us to trace changes in independent political projects in post-Stalin USSR. Unsolved social and economic problems, state unwillingness to listen for voices from below, repressions against dissenters stimulated the rejection of the idea to reform Soviet socialism among the part of critical intelligentsia. The disillusion in socialist ideas was not only the reaction on state policy. It was also based on the redefining of the legacy of October revolution 1917 and reforms of the State socialism in Eastern Europe in the mid 1950s, which were interpreted as the realization of revolutionary state governance. Dissenters of 1950-1960s formulated their demands to contemporary political regime using accessible classical Marxist-Leninist works and fictional biographies of revolutionaries. Usage of the legacy of the October in their texts varied from copying the revolutionary rhetoric to the testifying of Soviet political regime's compliance to the initial revolutionary theory. Many of them saw the main problem of Soviet state in the forgetting of the principle of proletarian dictatorship. The idea about party nomenclature as the main beneficiary of the October revolution was quite similar to the theory of "New Class" by M. Djilas. The book of Yugoslavian philosopher offered Marxist analysis of transformation of Yugoslavian political regime. He insisted on the inevitability of bureaucratic degradation of the revolutionary government. Acknowledgment of that inevitability did not only undermine political legitimacy of the contemporary Soviet regime but also took away the chance to justify it by appellation to its historical roots. That process stimulated the search for un-socialist alternatives for the Soviet regime such as the ideology of human rights or struggle for national sovereignty.... view less

Keywords
Hungary; revolution; October Revolution (1917); USSR; Warsaw Pact; political change; dissident; resistance; underground

Classification
General History

Free Keywords
Hungarian Revolution 1956; Milovan Djilas; Soviet Dissent; the "Thaw" period; Underground Political Organizations

Document language
Russian

Publication Year
2017

Page/Pages
p. 153-177

Journal
Sociologija vlasti / Sociology of power, 29 (2017) 2

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22394/2074-0492-2017-2-153-177

ISSN
2074-0492

Status
Published Version; reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0


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