Sovietization
{{Short description|Adoption of Soviet political system and mentality}}
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File:Latvijas PSR Drāmatiskais teātris. 1940.jpg decorated with Soviet symbols (hammer and sickle, red star, red flags and a double portrait of Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin) after the Soviet occupation in 1940. The text on top reads "Long live the USSR!"]]
Sovietization ({{langx|ru|советизация|sovyetizatsiya}} {{IPA|ru|səvʲɪtʲɪˈzat͡sɨjə|}}) is the adoption of a political system based on the model of soviets (workers' councils) or the adoption of a way of life, mentality, and culture modeled after the Soviet Union.
A notable wave of Sovietization (in the second meaning) occurred during the Russian Civil War in the territories captured by the Red Army. Later, the territories occupied by the Russian SFSR and the USSR were Sovietized. Mongolia was conquered by the Soviet Union and Sovietized in the 1920s, and after the end of the Second World War, Sovietization took place in the countries of the Soviet Bloc (Eastern and Central Europe: Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, the Baltic states, etc.).С. Кульчицький. Радянська влада // Політична енциклопедія. — p.620С. Кульчицький. Радянський комунізм // Політична енциклопедія. — p.621 In a broad sense, it included the creation of Soviet-style authorities, new elections held by Bolshevik party members with opposition parties being restricted, the nationalization of private land and property, and the repression against representatives of "class enemies" (kulaks, or osadniks, for instance). Mass executions and imprisoning in Gulag labor camps and exile settlements often accompany that process. This was usually promoted and sped up by propaganda aimed at creating a common way of life in all states within the Soviet sphere of influence. In modern history, Sovietization refers to the copying of models of Soviet life (the cult of the leader's personality, collectivist ideology, mandatory participation in propaganda activities, etc.).{{cite book|title =Demography and National Security|year=2001|editor=Myron Weiner, Sharon Stanton Russell|pages=308–315|chapter=Stalinist Forced Relocation Policies|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J9nuv7MGQ5MC&q=Sovietization&pg=PA309|publisher=Berghahn Books|isbn=1-57181-339-X}}Совєтизація // Українська мала енциклопедія : 16 кн. : у 8 т. / проф. Є. Онацький. — Накладом Адміністратури УАПЦ в Аргентині. — Буенос-Айрес, 1965. — Т. 7, [http://encyclopedia.kiev.ua/vydaniya/files/use/third_book/part3.pdf кн. XIV : Літери Сен — Сті]. — С. 1717—1844. — {{nowrap|1000 екз.}}[http://www.shynok.com.ua/rosija/myc/2400-rad.html Про радянізацію]{{dead link|date=July 2019|bot=InternetArchiveBot}}
In a narrow sense, the term Sovietization is often applied to mental and social changes within the population of the Soviet Union and its satellites,{{cite book|author=Józef Tischner|title=Etyka solidarności oraz Homo sovieticus|year=2005|publisher=Znak|location=Kraków|isbn=83-240-0588-9|page =295|language=pl}} which led to creation of the new Soviet man (according to its supporters) or Homo Sovieticus (according to its critics).{{cite book|author=Aleksandr Zinovyev|title=Homo sovieticus|year=1986|publisher=Grove/Atlantic|isbn=0-87113-080-7}}Барташук Олеся [http://www.nbuv.gov.ua/portal/soc_gum/Mandriv/2008_7/Bartashuk.pdf Наслідки запровадження радянської обрядовості (60–80-і рр. ХХ ст.): аналіз історико-етнографічних матеріалів календарного циклу Хмельницького Поділля] // [http://www.nbuv.gov.ua/portal/soc_gum/Mandriv/ Мандрівець Науковий журнал]. — [http://www.nbuv.gov.ua/portal/soc_gum/Mandriv/2008_7/index.htm 2008, No. 7]
See also
References
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Further reading
- {{cite journal|author=Edward J. O'Boyle|date=January 1993|title=Work Habits and Customer Service in Post-Communist Poland|journal=International Journal of Social Economics|volume=20|issue=1}}
- Weeks, Theodore R. (2010), [http://ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/models-and-stereotypes/russification-sovietization Russification / Sovietization], [http://www.ieg-ego.eu/ EGO - European History Online], Mainz: [http://www.ieg-mainz.de/likecms/index.php Institute of European History], retrieved: March 25, 2021 ([https://d-nb.info/1029976155/34 pdf]).
{{Cultural assimilation|sp=ize}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Soviet internal politics
Category:Politics of the Soviet Union
Category:Nationalism in the Soviet Union
Category:Social history of Belarus
Category:Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
Category:History of East Germany
Category:Hungarian People's Republic
Category:Polish People's Republic
Category:Poland–Soviet Union relations
Category:Social history of Ukraine