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The Partial Reopening of Russia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2019

Frederick C. Barghoorn*
Affiliation:
Yale University

Extract

This article is based on data assembled during a thirty-two day visit to Russia in June and July, 1956. Occasionally I supplemented my personal observations by material gleaned from other travelers, and I used data from the Soviet press when this seemed appropriate, to place my personal observations in context.

I was interested in studying "cultural exchange" between Communist Russia and the West. My point of view was that of a proponent of the "open society," anxious to participate in any exchange of ideas that might contribute, despite Communist suspicion, to a beneficial interaction between the two "camps" into which our world is divided. Perhaps this statement seems pretentious.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1957

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References

1 The extension of my visa above the then prevailing tourist maximum of thirty days wa« granted as a result of miscalculation regarding the time that would be required to arrange for a Polish transit visa and for airplane transportation to Warsaw. Intourist arranged for the extra hotel accommodations and meals free of charge.

2 For details see my article, “Cultural Relations and Soviet Foreign Policy,” World Politics, VIII, No. 3 (April, 1956), 323-44

3 One man, who identified himself as a Jew, bitterly denounced Stalin as a man “who thought he was Ghengis Khan.“

4 Partijnaja zhizn', No. 16 (August, 1956), p. 12.