A young boy Named Pavlik Morozov is known as a hero throughout Russia for turning his father in for his wrong doings. He had told the Soviet secret police that his father had been aiding kulaks, who at the time … Continue reading →
Week 7 Posts
Red Star, Week 7 Posts
False Mourning
by Alex Apollonio •
Joseph Stalin was, if nothing else, an opportunist, and that can be seen clearly in the tactics he used to come to power in the decade following Lenin’s death. A particularly strong example can be seen in 1934′s Kirov Affair, … Continue reading →
Week 7 Posts
Rehabilitation of Cossack Divisions
by Garland Pittard •
The life of Russians in the 1930’s is truly interesting. The people of Russia have finally become one with their halfway communistic society. Although a large majority of people had become adjusted to the Soviet, certain portions of society weren’t warming up to the Reds like everyone else. One of these groups is the well-known […]
Red Star, Week 7 Posts
Between a Rock and a Red Place
by Anna •
Opera censorship in 1936The cultural reformation in Soviet culture during 1936 caused controversy and contradictions, as the government castigated the creativity and innovation that it once supported. The primary victims of this artistic purge included poet Demyan Bedny and avant-garde composer Dmitri Shostakovitch, as their personal lives and creative work suffered because of the Soviets’ lack of…
Comrades' Corner, Week 7 Posts
Let’s Get Physical (Culture)
by abishop •
James von Geldern describes physical culture as “the hygiene and discipline of the bodies of socialist citizens” (von Geldern). This phenomenon was of fundamental importance to the Soviets in the 1920s and 1930s for several reasons. Prior to the revolution, sports clubs … Continue reading →
Comrades' Corner, Week 7 Posts
A Martyr of the Great Terror
by Steven Nagy •
When I traveled to Russia during the summer of 2013, I was fortunate enough to stumble across an exhibit dedicated to the life of Leon Trotsky in the basement of a Gulag museum in Moscow. I knew very little about the man who at one point was one of Vladimir Lenin’s right hand men, […]
Comrades' Corner, Week 7 Posts
It’s a ChurchPoolChurch!
by ryandellinger •
The Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was built over the span of 40 years, and opened in the 19th century. This church is the archetype of what all churches hope to be: it was the largest Orthodox Church ever built, and was a prime example of opulence. The inner sanctum was circumscribed by two galleries, […]
Week 7 Posts
Working the 9 to 5 and Then Some
by phillip5 •
Now that Russia had entered a new era of Bolshevism, labor dicipline became a major issue. Russia was in an attempt to show its power to the world. This meant everything Russian must impress. From their olympic sports teams right down to there average citizens in the workplace. Lenin himself had pegged Labor dicipline as […]
Comrades' Corner, Students' Choice, Week 7 Posts
The Mustache the Masses Loved… Or Did They?
by oliva2015 •


Week 7 Posts
The Start of a Massacre; The Assassination of Kirov
by jimmy jewett •
Image from http://russiapedia.rt.com/prominent-russians/politics-and-society/sergeykirov/ Stalin, a force and leader to be feared since the start of his rule, had not yet shown the true colors of his brutality by the early 1930s. This would all change with the start of … Continue reading →