Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964

<p>As the first man-made satellite orbited the Earth in October 1957, radios worldwide transmitted its persistent signal. Sputnik’s pulsing beep was either the most exhilarating proof to date of man’s rapid technological development, or a haunting reminder that, in the bi-polar world, science...

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Main Author: Trowel, K
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
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author Trowel, K
author_facet Trowel, K
author_sort Trowel, K
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description <p>As the first man-made satellite orbited the Earth in October 1957, radios worldwide transmitted its persistent signal. Sputnik’s pulsing beep was either the most exhilarating proof to date of man’s rapid technological development, or a haunting reminder that, in the bi-polar world, science and technology had become the yardstick by which ideological battles were won or lost. For some the incessant tone represented the triumph of Soviet socialism. For others, it meant a new and harrowing challenge to Western democracy and capitalism. Though these perspectives were, in fact, inseparable, each represented a quantitatively different world view in the ideologically contentious atmosphere of the Cold War. Regardless of where one stood in this polemic, Sputnik represented the first foray into a realm previously explored only in works and dreams of scientific and literary visionaries.</p> <p>The emergence of the space age in the middle of the twentieth century had an enormous impact on virtually every sphere of international life. Sputnik was the ‘shot’ that set thousands of scientists, millions of rubles (and dollars), and a seemingly endless stream of propaganda in motion, from both East and West. The early years of the Soviet space program offer an interesting and important perspective on Soviet history precisely because of this massive mobilization of resources. No group, from the most exalted party apparatchik to the lowest kolkhoz worker (and such class distinctions were well entrenched and problematic for the Khrushchev regime, as chapter 3 will discuss) was immune from Sputnik’s influence. This paper seeks to explore the influence of this epoch-defining event on a group whose members were not defined primarily by class affiliation or profession but rather by age: Soviet children.</p> <p>Continued in thesis ...</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:c4a0fa1e-1e6b-4695-bde9-ede6483e13832024-02-26T13:51:56ZPolitics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:c4a0fa1e-1e6b-4695-bde9-ede6483e1383Astronautics and civilizationChildren -- Soviet UnionEnglishHyrax Deposit2003Trowel, K<p>As the first man-made satellite orbited the Earth in October 1957, radios worldwide transmitted its persistent signal. Sputnik’s pulsing beep was either the most exhilarating proof to date of man’s rapid technological development, or a haunting reminder that, in the bi-polar world, science and technology had become the yardstick by which ideological battles were won or lost. For some the incessant tone represented the triumph of Soviet socialism. For others, it meant a new and harrowing challenge to Western democracy and capitalism. Though these perspectives were, in fact, inseparable, each represented a quantitatively different world view in the ideologically contentious atmosphere of the Cold War. Regardless of where one stood in this polemic, Sputnik represented the first foray into a realm previously explored only in works and dreams of scientific and literary visionaries.</p> <p>The emergence of the space age in the middle of the twentieth century had an enormous impact on virtually every sphere of international life. Sputnik was the ‘shot’ that set thousands of scientists, millions of rubles (and dollars), and a seemingly endless stream of propaganda in motion, from both East and West. The early years of the Soviet space program offer an interesting and important perspective on Soviet history precisely because of this massive mobilization of resources. No group, from the most exalted party apparatchik to the lowest kolkhoz worker (and such class distinctions were well entrenched and problematic for the Khrushchev regime, as chapter 3 will discuss) was immune from Sputnik’s influence. This paper seeks to explore the influence of this epoch-defining event on a group whose members were not defined primarily by class affiliation or profession but rather by age: Soviet children.</p> <p>Continued in thesis ...</p>
spellingShingle Astronautics and civilization
Children -- Soviet Union
Trowel, K
Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title_full Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title_fullStr Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title_full_unstemmed Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title_short Politics and imagination : Soviet children's culture and the space age, 1957-1964
title_sort politics and imagination soviet children s culture and the space age 1957 1964
topic Astronautics and civilization
Children -- Soviet Union
work_keys_str_mv AT trowelk politicsandimaginationsovietchildrenscultureandthespaceage19571964