Month: April 2019

Russian to Space

The Space Race between the US and the USSR was a critical moment of the 1950s and 1960s. The Soviets took lead in the competition with the successful launch of Sputnik 1. Part 1: Sputnik Sputnik 1 was launched from Kazakhstan on October 4, 1957. It was the first ever earth- orbiting artificial satellite. This … Continue reading Russian to Space

Little Blue Light

Out with the old and in with the new! Following the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953,  Nikita Khrushchev comes in to power and the so called “Thaw” begins. Moving away from Stalin’s frigid  societal values, Khrushchev introduces a new era for the arts. In this period there were a variety of developments such as … Continue reading Little Blue Light

Destination De-Stalinization: Say Goodbye to the GULAG

            Despite the “excesses and “errors” that plagued the post-Stalin era, some respectable reforms came out of this period (Freeze, p. 408). The best of these reforms reversed totalitarian policies from the Stalinist era, and perhaps the best example of them is the release of prisoners who were arrested for smaller crimes, who had low … Continue reading Destination De-Stalinization: Say Goodbye to the GULAG

Secrets, Secrets are No Fun

Secrets, secrets are no fun unless you share with everyone. The speech that everyone was talking about, yet nobody knew about, Khrushchev’s “Secret Speech“. To give a little bit of background, this speech was made behind closed doors, solely to the Communist Party’s Twentieth Congress, and there was no press from the Soviet side to […]

Secrecy Then, Secrecy Now: Khrushchev’s Denunciation of Stalinism

The Twentieth Party Congress (1956) served as a “watershed” moment in the political history of the Soviet Union (Freeze 416). It included many new faces in the delegation, as a means for Khrushchev to consolidate power, and avoided the contentious issue of Stalin’s legacy initially (Freeze 416). That changed with Khrushchev’s “bombshell,” “late-night” speech on … Continue reading Secrecy Then, Secrecy Now: Khrushchev’s Denunciation of Stalinism