Was a Soviet Man a Socialist? The Dichotomy of Consumerist Ideals and Socialist Values in Late / V. V. Ageeva [et al.]

Уровень набора: (RuTPU)RU\TPU\network\11959, The European Proceedings of Social & Behavioural Sciences (EpSBS)Альтернативный автор-лицо: Ageeva, V. V., historian, Associate Professor of Tomsk Polytechnic University, Candidate of historical sciences, 1986-, Vera Valentinovna;Ageev, I. A., historian, local historian, Senior Lecturer of Tomsk Polytechnic University, 1986-, Iliya Aleksandrovich;Nikolaeva, A. M., specialist in the field of foreign economic activities, manager of Tomsk Polytechnic University, 1995-, Anastasiya Mikhailovna;Levashkina, Z. N., ZoyaКоллективный автор (вторичный): Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет (ТПУ), Институт социально-гуманитарных технологий (ИСГТ), Кафедра истории и философии науки и техники (ИФНТ);Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет (ТПУ), Институт социально-гуманитарных технологий (ИСГТ), Кафедра социальных коммуникаций (СК)Язык: английский.Резюме или реферат: A number of British and American works of the 2000-2010s are devoted to the transformation of socialist ideas and crisis of collectivist values in the Soviet society after the Second World War. The objective of this article is to define the main trends of modern Anglophone historiography in studies of the dichotomy of consumerist ideals and socialist values in late Soviet society (1945-1990). The result of this study is an arrangement of general research approaches and an identifying of new thematic perspectives in Anglophone Russian Studies concerned with the Soviet period. Researchers consider the period from 1945 to 1990 as a comprehensive and logically complete period of Russian history. The internal unity of this period consists in the evolution of the Soviet way of life and socialist values. This process was incremental and hardly reflected by contemporaries (both within the Soviet state, and abroad). British and American works of the 2000-2010s filled a significant gap in world Russian Studies: the elements of capitalist culture, which coexisted in parallel with generally accepted Soviet way of life, were identified. A special contribution of modern Anglophone researches to Russian Studies is the analysis of socio-cultural processes, which were the evidence of the deformation of socialist norms and values. For instance, the occurrence of the sense of social injustice, greater recognition that a respected profession and a profitable occupation were divergent, is not sufficiently developed in Russian historical science..Примечания о наличии в документе библиографии/указателя: [References: p. 172 (28 tit.)].Аудитория: .Тематика: электронный ресурс | труды учёных ТПУ | ценности | советское общество | общество потребления | методология | историография Ресурсы он-лайн:Щелкните здесь для доступа в онлайн | Щелкните здесь для доступа в онлайн
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[References: p. 172 (28 tit.)]

A number of British and American works of the 2000-2010s are devoted to the transformation of socialist ideas and crisis of collectivist values in the Soviet society after the Second World War. The objective of this article is to define the main trends of modern Anglophone historiography in studies of the dichotomy of consumerist ideals and socialist values in late Soviet society (1945-1990). The result of this study is an arrangement of general research approaches and an identifying of new thematic perspectives in Anglophone Russian Studies concerned with the Soviet period. Researchers consider the period from 1945 to 1990 as a comprehensive and logically complete period of Russian history. The internal unity of this period consists in the evolution of the Soviet way of life and socialist values. This process was incremental and hardly reflected by contemporaries (both within the Soviet state, and abroad). British and American works of the 2000-2010s filled a significant gap in world Russian Studies: the elements of capitalist culture, which coexisted in parallel with generally accepted Soviet way of life, were identified. A special contribution of modern Anglophone researches to Russian Studies is the analysis of socio-cultural processes, which were the evidence of the deformation of socialist norms and values. For instance, the occurrence of the sense of social injustice, greater recognition that a respected profession and a profitable occupation were divergent, is not sufficiently developed in Russian historical science.

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