De-Stalinization and the House of Culture (1990) looks at the houses
of culture – arts centres which in the Stalinist period functioned
as agencies of political socialisation – and the changes in their
character and functions since Stalin’s death. This book explores the
diminishing control of the Communist Party over public leisure from
1953 to the present day, as one aspect of the de-Stalinization and the
dismantling of the totalitarian system. It focuses on the changing
nature and functions of the ‘cultural enlightenment’ conducted in
houses of culture and similar institutions. Public rejection of the
Stalinist attempt to saturate all leisure activities with propaganda
and to liquidate many national cultural traditions have gradually
forced the party to relinquish much of its leading role in this area.
The book compares this process in three different Soviet-type systems,
the USSR, Poland and Hungary. It discusses depoliticization of house
of culture activities and, especially in the era of perestroika, their
eventual repoliticization by unofficial associations concerned with a
mix of political, cultural, social and environmental issues. Today the
house of culture, a quintessentially Stalinist institution,
paradoxically provides a home for an emergent civil society.
Les mer
Declining State Control over Leisure in the USSR, Poland and Hungary, 1953–1989
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040184240
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter