L’Union des écrivains soviétiques (1934-1991). Un moyen pour une fin et le modèle de toutes les unions créatrices du bloc soviétique
The Union of Soviet Writers (1934-1991). A Means for a Goal and a Model for all the Creative Unions in the Soviet Bloc
Author(s): Cécile VaissiéSubject(s): Studies of Literature, Recent History (1900 till today), History of Communism
Published by: Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti
Keywords: URSS; Union of Writers; literature; propaganda; Communism;
Summary/Abstract: Created in 1934, the Union of Soviet Writers facilitated the instrumentalisation of literature by the Soviet authorities: it was its main goal, explicitly proclaimed at the first Congress of this Union, and repeated until the 1980s. The Union of Soviet Writers was supposed to create and educate a “New Person” who would build and embody communism. Furthermore, the Union of Soviet Writers was the model of other creative unions in the USSR and in the Soviet bloc. For more than fifty years, it selected, guided and controlled writers; it participated to the censorship process, as well as to the purges and repression of dissidents. In exchange, the Union of Soviet Writers received very important material rewards, of which its leaders were the main beneficiaries. The Union of Writers developed as a pyramidal structure: it had organizations in every Soviet republic (in Russia, only since 1958) and in many towns, and they collaborated at all levels with the corresponding CPSU structures. During the Stagnation, it also reactivated functional links with the army, the Ministry of the Interior and the Komsomol, with kolkhozes and factories. The Union of Soviet Writers was infiltrated by the KGB, which contributed to spreading fear and sterilizing an official literature of which few works are still read nowadays.
Journal: Studia Politica. Romanian Political Science Review
- Issue Year: 17/2017
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 37-54
- Page Count: 18
- Language: French