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Making News Soviet: Rethinking Journalistic Professionalism after Stalin, 1953–1970

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 December 2017

SIMON HUXTABLE*
Affiliation:
Loughborough University, Epinal Way, Loughborough LE11 3TU; [email protected]

Abstract

This article challenges the assumption, frequently made in scholarship on Soviet media, that news was absent in the Soviet Union. Working across press, radio, and television, the article shows how after 1953 reform of Soviet news became a priority for journalists, editors and media professionals. The article focuses on discussions among journalists and officials about the future of journalism, arguing that journalists’ notions of professional excellence played a crucial role in shaping news coverage. In a climate of Cold War competition with western radio, new technological possibilities and changing political priorities, journalists gradually overcame their condescension towards news, emphasising its civic potential as an agent of social ‘democratisation’, and the artistic nature of reportage. This new configuration was precarious, however, and collapsed after the Czechoslovakian crisis of 1968. As the Party placed new restrictions on the flow of information, news lost its professional prestige.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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Footnotes

Research for this article was generously funded through a Doctoral grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, and also as part of the Leverhulme Trust project ‘Screening Socialism’ (RPG 2013-025). My thanks to Christine Evans, Dina Fainberg, Stephen Lovell, Chrysi Papaioannou, and to the article's anonymous reviewers for their comments.

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51 ‘Protocol of Closed Party Meeting at KP’, 14 Mar. 1956, OKhDOPIM, f.1968, op.1, d.30, l.96. Evans likewise argues that the journalism of the First Five Year Plan was an inspiration for TV news producers (Between Truth and Time, 115–9).

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72 This might be considered as a process of ‘remediation’: Bolter, Jay David and Grusin, Richard, Remediation: Understanding New Media (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998).Google Scholar

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94 Ibid., l.89.

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96 Cold War Broadcasting, 539, 543.

97 Mikkonen, ‘Stealing’, 797–803.

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108 Transcript of Second Congress of the Union of Journalists, 28 Sept. 1966, GARF, f.10124, op.1, d.301, l.218. My thanks to Mary-Catherine French for helping me locate this source. See also the comments of Dmitrii Goriunov, ll.45–46, 49–51; Tolkunov, Lev, ‘Slovo est’ deloZhurnalist 7, (1967), 5Google Scholar. These salvos appear to stem from an earlier Kommunist editorial: ‘Antisovetizm – odno iz glavnykh napravlenii v ideologii sovremennogo imperializma’ Kommunist, 10 (1965), 77.

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112 Lovell, Russia, 174–8, 189; Roth-Ey, Moscow, 173; Nelson, War, 119–20.

113 KP editorial letuchka, 1 June 1966, RGASPI, f.98M, op.1, d.430, l.12.

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133 Wolfe, Governing, 45–8; Roudakova, Losing Pravda, 51–97.

134 Roudakova, Losing Pravda.

135 On news media during perestroika see Wolfe, Governing, 151–70; Mickiewicz, Ellen, Changing Channels: Television and the Struggle for Power in Russia (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997)Google Scholar; McNair, Brian, Glasnost, Perestroika and the Soviet Media (Abingdon: Routledge, 1991)Google Scholar.