Difference between revisions of "Great Soviet Encyclopedia"
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The '''Great Soviet Encyclopedia''' was an [[encyclopedia]] published in the [[USSR]] from 1926 to 1990. | The '''Great Soviet Encyclopedia''' was an [[encyclopedia]] published in the [[USSR]] from 1926 to 1990. | ||
| − | The publication is perhaps best remembered for how it dealt with people who had run afoul of the Soviet administration, and the clever use of [[censorship]] to remove reference to those individuals from its record, including mailing people articles and asking them to remove pages from their copies of the book and replace them with the new ones they'd been sent. | + | The publication is perhaps best remembered for how it dealt with people who had run afoul of the Soviet administration, and the clever use of [[censorship]] and historic [[revisionism]] to remove reference to those individuals from its record, including mailing people articles and asking them to remove pages from their copies of the book and replace them with the new ones they'd been sent. |
| − | [[Category: Communism]] | + | The idea of removing non-persons from official history is prominent in Orwell's ''[[1984]]''. It is job of the protagonist, Winston Smith. |
| + | {{communism}} | ||
| + | [[Category:Communism]] | ||
Latest revision as of 05:18, June 30, 2020
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia was an encyclopedia published in the USSR from 1926 to 1990.
The publication is perhaps best remembered for how it dealt with people who had run afoul of the Soviet administration, and the clever use of censorship and historic revisionism to remove reference to those individuals from its record, including mailing people articles and asking them to remove pages from their copies of the book and replace them with the new ones they'd been sent.
The idea of removing non-persons from official history is prominent in Orwell's 1984. It is job of the protagonist, Winston Smith.