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and Balkan Europe
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Thursday November 21, 2024
 
Testata per la stampa
 
 
 

Soviet Soft Power in Poland

Culture and the Making of Stalin's New Empire, 1943-1957

by: Patryk Babiracki
published by: University of North Carolina University Press
pp: 368
ISBN: 978-1-4696-2089-3
price: $37.50

Book's frontpage

Concentrating on the formative years of the Cold War from 1943 to 1957, Patryk Babiracki reveals little-known Soviet efforts to build a postwar East European empire through culture. Babiracki argues that the Soviets involved in foreign cultural outreach tried to use “soft power” in order to galvanize broad support for the postwar order in the emerging Soviet bloc. Populated with compelling characters ranging from artists, writers, journalists, and scientists to party and government functionaries, this work illuminates the behind-the-scenes schemes of the Stalinist international propaganda machine. Based on exhaustive research in Russian and Polish archives, Babiracki's study is the first in any language to examine the two-way interactions between Soviet and Polish propagandists and to evaluate their attempts at cultural cooperation. Babiracki shows that the Stalinist system ultimately undermined Soviet efforts to secure popular legitimacy abroad through persuasive propaganda. He also highlights the limitations and contradictions of Soviet international cultural outreach, which help explain why the Soviet empire in Eastern Europe crumbled so easily after less than a half-century of existence.

 

Reviews

"Beautifully written and full of original insights gleaned from a variety of newly available sources, Soviet Soft Power in Poland reveals Patryk Babiracki as a master of the complexities of Cold War politics in East Central Europe. This landmark work deserves a wide readership among those who want to know what the Cold War meant to the millions who lived beyond the Iron Curtain."
--John Connelly, author of Captive University: The Sovietization of East German, Czech, and Polish Higher Education, 1945-1956

About the Author

Patryk Babiracki is assistant professor in Russian and East European history at the University of Texas at Arlington and a Volkswagen–Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung in Potsdam.

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