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The Friendship Project: Socialist Internationalism in the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia in the 1950s and 1960s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
This article examines the evolution of socialist internationalism in the 1950s and 1960s through a case study of cultural relations between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. More broadly, it explores attempts by Soviet and eastern bloc officials to integrate their countries into a cohesive “socialist world” by constructing an extensive network of transnational, cultural, interpersonal, and commercial ties between their citizens. Accounts of Soviet-eastern bloc relations during this period tend to focus on the iconic crises in Poland and Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968. Yet in the realm of everyday life, the 1950s and 1960s were the apogee of Soviet-eastern European integration. I argue that in the case of Soviet-Czechoslovak relations, the new version of socialist internationalism that developed during these decades was successful in so far as it shaped the lives of ordinary citizens—through participation in friendship societies, pen-pal correspondences, and the consumption of each other's mass media and consumer goods. As these contacts brought the two countries closer, however, they inadvertently highlighted cultural and political discord between them, which ultimately helped undermine the very alliance they were designed to support.
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References
Support for this article was provided by the Fulbright-Hays Program, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Max Weber Programme at the European University Institute, and the Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship Program at the Center for the Humanities at Tufts University. I would like to thank Harriet Murav and the two anonymous reviewers for Slavic Review for their very helpful suggestions for revising the article. I would also like to thank Sheila Fitzpatrick, Michael Geyer, and Leora Auslander for their support while I was writing my dissertation at the University of Chicago. I am especially indebted to Tara Zahra, who read multiple drafts of this article and offered helpful advice about the publishing process; Joshua Kotin for editing assistance; and Pavel Kolář for his insight on the eastern bloc and for Czech language assistance. I received invaluable feedback on earlier versions of this article from participants at the Russian Studies workshop at the University of Chicago; a panel on post-Stalinist friendship at ASEEES in 2011; the Midwest Historians of East Central Europe workshop in 2013; and the fall 2013 thesis workshop at the Department of History and Civilization at the European University Institute. The epigraph is quoted from “Nežiji s hlavou v růžovþch oblacích,” Student, March 6, 1968, 3.
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16. See, for instance, issues of Přítel SSSR, 1949-51.
17. Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi arkhiv noveishei istorii (RGANI), f. 5, op. 17, d. 431, 1. 125.
18. On the Zhdanovshchina and the other antiwestern campaigns, see Fürst, Juliane, Stalin's Last Generation: Soviet Post-War Youth and the Emergence of Mature Socialism (Oxford, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On the surge of Russocentrism in the Soviet Union during late Stalinism, see Brandenberger, David, National Bolshevism: Stalinist Mass Culture and the Formation of Modern Russian National Identity, 1931-1956 (Cambridge, Mass., 2002)Google Scholar.
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24. GARF, f. 9576, op. 2, d. 53 (On the creation of the Soviet-Czechoslovak Friendship Society), 1. 46.
25. Programma KPSS priniata 22 s”ezdom KPSS, 3. Mirovaia sistema sotsializma (Moscow, 1974), at http://leftinmsu.narod.ru/polit_nles/books/III_program_KPSS_files/019.htm (last accessed May 5,2015).
26. Brzezinski, The Soviet Bloc, 456-60.
27. On tourism, see Gorsuch, Anne E., “Time Travelers: Soviet Tourists to Eastern Europe,” in Gorsuch, Anne E. and Koenker, Diane P., eds., Turizm: The Russian and East European Tourist under Capitalism and Socialism (Ithaca, 2006), 205–26Google Scholar; Gorsuch, Anne E., All This Is Your World: Soviet Tourism at Home and Abroad after Stalin (Oxford, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Applebaum, Rachel, “A Test of Friendship: Soviet-Czechoslovak Tourism and the Prague Spring,” in Gorsuch, Anne E. and Koenker, Diane P., eds., The Socialist Sixties: Crossing Borders in the Second World (Bloomington, 2013), 213–32Google Scholar.
28. On Hungary as a motivating factor behind eastern European integration, see Brzezinski, The Soviet Bloc, 456.
29. Nye, Joseph S., Soft Power: The Means to Success in World Politics (New York, 2004), x Google Scholar. On the different types of power available to democracies versus authoritarian governments, see ibid., 6. See also Reeves, Julie, Culture and International Relations: Narratives, Natives, and Tourists (London, 2004), 41–44 Google Scholar.
30. For instance, the USSR attempted to use the 1957 World Youth Festival in Moscow to repair relations with Hungary. Eleonory Gilburd, “The Revival of Soviet Internationalism in the Mid to Late 1950s,” in Gilburd and Kozlov, eds., The Thaw, 386. Following their invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, the Soviets made interpersonal and cultural relations with Czechoslovak citizens a key part of their strategy of “normalization.“
31. On the eastern bloc as a Soviet empire, see Burbank, Jane and Cooper, Frederick, Empires in World History: Power and the Politics of Difference (Princeton, 2010), 431–33Google Scholar; on Soviet imperial relations with postwar Poland, see Babiracki, Soviet Soft Power and the Poles; and on applying an imperial paradigm to Soviet relations with eastern Europe more broadly (including during the Soviet occupation of eastern Poland in 1939-41), see Tarik Amar, “Sovietization as a Civilizing Mission in the West,” in Apor, Apor, and Rees, eds., The Sovietization of Eastern Europe, 29-45.
32. The other friendship societies were devoted to relations with China, Finland, Hungary, the GDR, Poland, Italy, and India. See Eleonory Gilburd, “To See Paris and Die: Western Culture in the Soviet Union, 1950s and 1960s” (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2010), 35nllO.
33. Ibid., 25.
34. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 31 (Letter from Popova to the Central Committee of the Union of Czechoslovak-Soviet Friendship, March 27,1958), 1.260. On SSOD's replacement of VOKS, see Gilburd, “The Revival of Soviet Internationalism,” 373.
35. Knapik, Jiřě, Únor a kultura: Sovětizace české kultury, 1948-1950 (Prague, 2004), 166 Google Scholar. By 1957, the SČSP had 2,000,000 members. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 31 (Report from the Soviet embassy in Czechoslovakia to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the fortieth anniversary of the October revolution and the annual Month of Czechoslovak-Soviet Friendship, December 1957], 1. 12.
36. When a Czech reader wrote to the SČSP's journal, Svět sovětů (World of the Soviets), inquiring why a similar organization did not exist in the USSR, the journal claimed it turned to a Soviet veteran, who ostensibly supplied the unconvincing explanation that “there is no Union of Friends of Czechoslovakia here because we are all friends of the ČSR.” “Oč nám jde milý příteli,” Svět sovětů, January 17, 1947, 7.
37. GARF, f. 9576, op. 2, d. 53 (On the creation of the Soviet-Czechoslovak Friendship Society), 11. 36-37.
38. Ibid., 11. 62-70.
39. Ibid., 11. 21-24.
40. Ibid., 11. 8-17.
41. On the number of Soviet dead, see Ústav pro soudobé dějiny AV ČR (ÚSD), Sbírka dokumentů Komise vlády ČSFR pro analýzu událostí let 1967-1970, i.č. 274, sign. DI/274, k. 7 (Report by General Ogarkov protesting the destruction of Soviet WWII graves in Czechoslovakia, September, 1968).
42. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 95 (Report from the Irkutsk branch of the Union of Soviet Friendship and Cultural Contacts with Foreign Countries during the Month of Soviet-Czechoslovak Friendship, 1960), 1. 196.
43. See letters from people interested in joining the OSChD, GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 38.
44. Ibid., 1. 19. On scholarly interests, see ibid., 11. 77, 105, 138.
45. Susan E. Reid and David Crowley, introduction to Susan E. Reid and David Crowley, eds., Pleasures in Socialism: Leisure and Luxury in the Eastern Bloc (Evanston, 2012), 15. See also Edele, Mark, Soviet Veterans of the Second World War: A Popular Movement in an Authoritarian Society, 1941-1991 (Oxford, 2008), 170 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Gleb Tsipursky, “Having Fun in the Thaw: Youth Initiative Clubs in the Post-Stalin Years,” Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. 2201 (Pittsburgh, 2012), 12.
46. Gilburd, “The Revival of Internationalism in the Mid to Late 1950s,” 363.
47. “Dobrý den, drazí českoslovenští přátelá!,” Svět sovětů, September 3, 1952, 19.
48. NA, f. 1261, a.j. 282 (Report on the LKR for the ÚV-SČSP, December 28, 1951).
49. The prospect of Soviet citizens corresponding with people in capitalist countries was widely discussed during the thaw, although the Soviet government was very hesitant about it. Ultimately, most pen-pal correspondences with the west were undertaken on a collective basis, which made them easier for the authorities to control. See Gilburd, “To See Paris and Die,” 36-38.
50. GARF, f. 9576, op. 2, d. 53 (On the creation of the Soviet-Czechoslovak Friendship Society), 1. 91.
51. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 69 (Report from the SČSP on Russian language study), 11. 219-20.
52. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 71 (Correspondence between Galia Kudriatseva and Pronin, an official at SSOD), 11. 27-27a.
53. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 68 (Letter from Pronin to Svetlana, June 29, 1959), 1. 282.
54. Malíř, M., Fraňkova, T., and Lukešová, A., Dopisujeme si rusky: Přiručka pro kursy ruského jazyka a pro přípravu dopisů do SSSR (Prague, 1965), 10 Google Scholar.
55. Ibid., 21, 26, 36, 42.
56. Gilburd, “The Revival of Soviet Internationalism,” 363.
57. Malíř, Fraňkova, and Lukešová, Dopisujeme si rusky, 10.
58. There was also a separate Slovak magazine, Svet socializmu (World of Socialism), founded in 1951.
59. AMZV, f. TO SSSR-Tajné, 1960-1964, k. 3, o. 4 (Report from the Czechoslovak embassy in Moscow on propagating the ČSSR in the USSR, September 1964).
60. AMZV, f. TO SSSR-Tajné, 1965-1969, k. 2, o. 10 (Report on further possibilities for propagating the ČSSR in the USSR, May 1965), 1. 9.
61. GARF, f. 9572, op. 4, d. 100 (Protocol of a conference for readers of the journal Chekhoslovakiia in Saratov, July 1960), 1. 183.
62. “Čternáři promluví,” Svět sovětů, December 27, 1961, 2-3.
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64. See, for instance, Ukrainian recipes published in Svět sovětů, March 6, 1958.
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67. GARF, f. 9576, op. 4, d. 31 (Meeting of the Presidium of the SČSP, January 2, 1958), 11. 66-67.
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82. GARF, f. 9572, op. 4, d. 295 (Report from the Soviet embassy in Czechoslovakia on a trip to Karlovy Vary, March 6, 1967), 1. 183.
83. RGANI, f. 5, op. 33, d. 234 (Report by N. Mikhailkov, chairman of the Committee for the Press of the Soviet Ministers about a trip to Czechoslovakia, March 1966), 1. 30.
84. GARF, f. 9572, op. 4, d. 2951. 183.
85. RGANI, f. 5, op. 33, d. 234 (Report by N. Mikhailkov, chairman of the Committee for the Press of the Soviet Ministers about a trip to Czechoslovakia, March 1966).
86. GARF, f. 9572, op. 4, d. 295, 1. 184.
87. “Vstretimsia v ‘Belom lebede,’” Sotsialisticheskaia Chekhoslovakiia, April 1961, 12.
88. “Foreign Goods,” translated and reprinted in condensed form from Sovetskaia torgovlia, October 13, 1956, 2, in the Current Digest of the Soviet Press 8, no. 42 (November 28,1956): 5-6.
89. “Development of U.S.S.R. Foreign Trade in 1956,” Current Digest of the Soviet Press 10, no. 6 (1958): 12-15.
90. AMZV, f. TO SSSR-Tajné, 1965-1969, k. 2, o. 10 (Report on further possibilities for propagating the CSSR in the USSR, May 1965), 1.2.
91. See, for example, Bren and Neuberger, introduction to Communism Unwrapped, 10-11; Susan E. Reid, “This Is Tomorrow! Becoming a Consumer in the Soviet Sixties,” in Gorsuch and Koenker, eds., The Socialist Sixties, 25-65; and Patterson, Patrick Hyder, “Risky Business: What Was Really Being Sold in the Department Stores of Socialist Eastern Europe?,” in Bren, and Neuberger, , Communism Unwrapped, 116–39Google Scholar.
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93. NA, f. 1261_1, část II, i.č. 278 (Letter from FrantiŠek Krajčír to the Czechoslovak Ministry of Schools and Culture, March 25, 1959).
94. Reid, “Who Will Beat Whom?,” 236.
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98. “Co o nás vědi Moskvané,” 13.
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