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Reflecting Socioeconomic Realities in Russian North through Printed Word, 1950-1980s

https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2026-15-2-478-499

Abstract

This article examines literary texts, journalism, and documentary materials from the Soviet period (1950-1980) to illuminate the historical context of evolving cultural identities in the Russian North. Drawing on sources from regional and central archives – including holdings from the Archive of Contemporary Russian History (formerly the CPSU Central Committee Archive) and the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art, specifically the collections of the Soviet Writers’ Union – this study identifies key themes that preoccupied “Northern Writers” in the latter half of the twentieth century. These themes centered on grappling with socio-economic transformations and their impact on everyday life. The analysis demonstrates that Party control exerted significant pressure on the literary sphere, shaping creative output through demands for socialist realism and a focus on depicting socialist life. Based on a close reading of literary works, this article argues that by the early 1990s, value systems and behavioral norms in the Russian North had undergone a discernible shift, marked by a decline in traditional work ethics, a growing disconnect from the land, a fading understanding of the peasant mindset, and a weakening of established customs. The study concludes that the literary community played an active role in interpreting these societal value shifts, articulating premonitions of change within the historical and cultural space of the rural Russian North, and participating in broader public debates.

About the Author

A. I. Stoletova
Vologda State Dairy Academy named after N. V. Vereshchagin
Russian Federation

Anna S. Stoletova, PhD in History, Department of Humanities

Vologda

 



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For citations:


Stoletova A.I. Reflecting Socioeconomic Realities in Russian North through Printed Word, 1950-1980s. Nauchnyi dialog. 2026;15(2):478-499. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2026-15-2-478-499

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ISSN 2225-756X (Print)
ISSN 2227-1295 (Online)