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by James Millar


  COLE BLASIER

  CULT OF PERSONALITY

  At the Twentieth Congress of the Communist Party in 1956, Nikita Khrushchev denounced Josef Stalin’s “Cult of Personality” in the so-called “Secret Speech.” He declared, “It is impermissible and foreign to the spirit of Marxism-Leninism to elevate one person, to transform him into a superman possessing supernatural characteristics akin to those of a god.” In addition to enumerating Stalin’s repression of the Communist Party during the purges, Khrushchev recounted how in films, literature, his Short Biography, and the Short Course of the History of the Communist Party, Stalin displaced Vladimir Lenin, the Party, and the people and claimed responsibility for all of the successes of the Revolution, the civil war, and World War II. Khrushchev’s speech praised Lenin as a modest “genius,” and demanded that “history, literature and the fine arts properly reflect Lenin’s role and the great deeds of our Communist Party and of the

  CULT OF PERSONALITY

  Soviet people.” Khrushchev’s formulation reveals the paradox of the “cult of personality.” While denigrating the cult of Stalin, Khrushchev reinvigo-rated the cult of Lenin.

  Analysts have traced the leader cult back to the earliest days of the Soviet Union, when a personality cult spontaneously grew up around Lenin. The cult grew among Bolsheviks because of Lenin’s stature as Party leader and among the population due to Russian traditions of the personification of political power in the tsar (Tucker, 1973, pp. 59-60). Lenin himself was appalled by the tendency to turn him into a mythic hero and fought against it. After the leader’s death in 1924, however, veneration of Lenin became an integral part of the Communist Party’s quest for legitimacy. Party leaders drew on both political and religious traditions in their decision to place a mausoleum containing the embalmed body of Lenin at the geographic and political center of Soviet power in Moscow’s Red Square. Once Lenin was enshrined as a sacred figure, his potential successors scrambled to position themselves as his true heirs.

  After Stalin consolidated his power and embarked on the drive for socialist construction, he began to build his own cult of personality. Stalin’s efforts were facilitated by the previously existing leader cult, and he trumpeted his special relationship with Lenin. Early evidence of the Stalin cult can be found in the press coverage of his fiftieth birthday in 1929, which extolled “the beloved leader, the truest pupil and comrade-in-arms of Vladimir Ilich Lenin” (Brooks, 2000, p. 61). In the early 1930s, Stalin shaped his image as leader by establishing himself as the ultimate expert in fields other than politics. He became “the premier living Marxist philosopher” and an authoritative historian of the Party (Tucker, 1992, pp. 150-151). Stalin shamelessly rewrote Party history to make himself Lenin’s chief assistant and adviser in 1917. Soviet public culture of the 1930s and 1940s attributed all of the achievements of the Soviet state to Stalin directly and lauded his military genius in crafting victory in World War II. Stalin’s brutal repressions went hand in hand with a near-deification of his person. The outpouring of grief at his death in 1953 revealed the power of Stalin’s image as wise father and leader of the people.

  Once he had consolidated power, Nikita Khrushchev focused on destroying Stalin’s cult. Many consider Khrushchev’s 1956 attack on the Stalin cult to be his finest political moment. Although Khrushchev criticized Stalin, he reaffirmed the institution of the leader cult by invoking Lenin and promoting his own achievements. Khrushchev’s condemnation of the Stalin cult was also limited by his desire to preserve the legitimacy of the socialist construction that Stalin had undertaken. After Khrushchev’s fall, Leonid Brezhnev criticized Khrushchev’s personal style of leadership but ceased the assault on Stalin’s cult of personality. He then employed the institution of the leader cult to enhance his own legitimacy.

  Like Stalin’s cult, Brezhnev’s cult emphasized “the link with Lenin, [his] . . . role in the achievement of successes . . . and his relationship with the people” (Gill). The Brezhnev-era party also perpetuated the Lenin cult and emphasized its own links to Lenin by organizing a lavish commemoration of the centennial of Lenin’s birth in 1970. The association of Soviet achievements with Brezhnev paled in comparison to the Stalin cult and praise of Brezhnev’s accomplishments often linked them to the Communist Party as well. Both Khrushchev and Brezhnev sought to raise the status of the Communist Party in relation to its leader. Yet Stalin, Khrushchev, and Brezhnev all conceived of the role of the people as consistently subordinate to leader and Party.

  It was not until Gorbachev instituted the policy of glasnost, or openness, in the mid-1980s that the institution of the cult of personality came under sustained attack. The Soviet press revealed Stalin’s crimes and then began to scrutinize the actions of all of the Soviet leaders, eventually including Lenin. The press under Gorbachev effectively demolished the institution of the Soviet leader cult by revealing the grotesque falsifications required to perpetuate it and the violent repression of the population hidden behind its facade. These attacks on the cult of personality undermined the legitimacy of the Soviet Union and contributed to its downfall.

  In the post-Soviet period, analysts have begun to see signs of a cult of personality growing around Vladimir Putin. Other observers, however, are skeptical of how successful such a leader cult could be in the absence of a Party structure to promote it and given the broad access to information that contemporary Russians enjoy. The cult of personality played a critical role in the development of the Soviet state and in its dissolution. The discrediting of the cult of the leader as an institution in the late Soviet period makes its post-Soviet future uncertain at best.

  CULTURAL REVOLUTION

  See also: KHRUSHCHEV, NIKITA SERGEYEVICH; LENIN’S TOMB; LENIN, VLADIMIR ILICH; PUTIN, VLADIMIR VLADIMIROVICH; STALIN, JOSEF VISSARIONOVICH

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Brooks, Jeffrey. (2000). Thank You, Comrade Stalin! Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Gill, Graeme. (1980). “The Soviet Leader Cult: Reflections on the Structure of Leadership in the Soviet Union.” British Journal of Political Science 10(2):167-186. “How Likely Is a Putin Cult of Personality?” (2001). [Panel Discussion] Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press 53(21):4-6. Khrushchev, Nikita. (1956). “On the Cult of Personality and Its Harmful Consequences” Congressional Proceedings and Debates of the 84th Congress, 2nd Session (May 22-June 11), C11, Part 7 (June 4), pp. 9,389-9,403. Tucker, Robert C. (1973). Stalin as Revolutionary, 1879-1929. New York: Norton. Tucker, Robert C. (1992). Stalin in Power: The Revolution from Above, 1928-1941. New York: Norton. Tumarkin, Nina. (1983). Lenin Lives! The Lenin Cult in Russia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

  KAREN PETRONE

  CULTURAL REVOLUTION

  “Cultural revolution” (kulturnaya revolyutsiya) was a concept used by Lenin in his late writings (e.g., his 1923 article “On Cooperation”) to refer to general cultural development of the country under socialism, with emphasis on such matters as inculcation of literacy and hygiene, implying gradual transformation out of the backwardness that Lenin saw as the legacy of tsarism.

  In the late 1920s, the term was taken up and transformed by young communist cultural militants who sought the party leaders’ approval for an assault on “bourgeois hegemony” in culture; that is, on the cultural establishment, including Anatoly Lunacharsky and other leaders of the People’s Commissariat of Enlightenment, and the values of the old Russian intelligentsia. For the militants, the essence of cultural revolution was “class war”-an assault against the “bourgeois” intelligentsia in the name of the proletariat-and they meant the “revolution” part of the term literally. In the years 1928 through 1931, the militants succeeded in gaining the party leaders’ support, but lost it again in 1932 when the Central Committee dissolved the main militant organization, the Russian Association of Proletarian Writers (RAPP), and promoted reconciliation with the intelligentsia.

  In the late 1950s and 1960s, the concept of cultural revolution received a new lease of life in the Soviet Union.
The inspiration came from Lenin’s writings, not from the militant episode of 1928 through 1931, which was largely forgotten or suppressed as discreditable. Cultural revolution was now seen as a unique process associated with socialist revolution, which, for the first time, made culture the property of the whole people. The emphasis was on the civilizing mission of Soviet power, particularly in the country’s own “backward,” non-Slavic republics and regions. Rebutting suggestions from East European scholars that cultural revolution was not a necessary step in the evolution of countries that were not backward when they came to socialism, Soviet writers such as Maxim Kim described cultural revolution as one of the general laws (zakonomernosti) of socialism first realized in the Soviet Union but applicable to all nations.

  In Western Soviet historiography since the late 1970s, the term has often connoted the militant episode of the Cultural Revolution (in some respects foreshadowing the Chinese Cultural Revolution of the 1960s) described in the 1978 volume edited by Sheila Fitzpatrick. It has also been used in a sense different from any of the above to describe a Bolshevik (or, more broadly, Russian revolutionary) transformationist mentality endemic in the first quarter of the twentieth century (Joravsky; Clark; David-Fox).

  Along with collectivization and the First Five-Year Plan, the Cultural Revolution was one of the great upheavals of the late 1920s and 1930s sometimes known as the “Great Break” (veliky perelom) or Stalin’s “revolution from above.” There were two important differences between the Cultural Revolution and other “Great Break” policies, however. The first was that whereas the turn to collectivization, elimination of kulaks, and forced-pace industrialization proved to be permanent, the Cultural Revolution was relatively short-lived. The second was that, in contrast to the collectivization and industrialization drives, Stalin’s personal involvement and commitment was limited to a few areas, notably the show trials of “wrecker” engineers and the formation of a new proletarian intelligentsia through worker promotion (vydvizhenie), and he

  CULTURAL REVOLUTION

  was doubtful of or positively hostile to a number of the militants’ initiatives (e.g., in educational policy, literature, and architecture) when they came to his attention. The fact that the Cultural Revolution was followed by what Nicholas S. Timasheff called a “Great Retreat” in cultural and social policy in the mid-1930s strongly suggests that Stalin, like Lenin before him, lacked enthusiasm for the utopianism and iconoclasm that inspired many of the young cultural militants.

  The most influential of the militant organizations in culture, RAPP, had been agitating since the mid-1920s for an abandonment of the relatively tolerant and pluralist cultural policies associated with Lunacharsky and his People’s Commissariat of Enlightenment, and the establishment of uncompromising “proletarian” (which, in the arts, often meant communist-militant) rule in literature. RAPP’s pretensions were rebuffed in 1925, but in 1928 the atmosphere in the party leadership abruptly changed with the staging of the Shakhty trial, in which “bourgeois” engineers-serving as a synecdoche for the noncommunist Russian intelligentsia as a whole-were accused of sabotage and conspiracy with foreign powers. At the same time, Stalin launched a campaign for intensified recruitment and promotion of workers and young communists to higher education, especially engineering schools, and administrative positions, with the purpose of creating a “worker-peasant intelligentsia” to replace the old bourgeois one. The obverse of this policy was purging of “socially undesirable” students and employees from schools, universities, and government departments.

  Stalin used the drive against the bourgeois intelligentsia to discredit political opponents, whom he took pains to link with noncommunist intellectuals accused of treason in the series of show trials that began in 1928. “Rightists” like Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov, who opposed Stalin’s maximalist plans for forcible collectivization and forced-pace industrialization, became targets of a smear campaign that linked them with the class enemy, implying that they were sympathetic to, perhaps even in league with, kulaks as well as “wreckers” from the bourgeois intelligentsia.

  As an “unleashing” of militants in all fields of culture and scholarship, as well as in the communist youth movement (the Komsomol), the Cultural Revolution generated a host of spontaneous as well as centrally directed radical initiatives. As occurred later in the Chinese Cultural Revolution, young radicals from the Komsomol launched raids on “bureaucracy” that severely disrupted the work of government institutions. Endemic purging of all kinds of institutions, from schools and hospitals to local government departments, often initiated by local activists without explicit instructions from the center, was equally disruptive.

  Among the main loci of Cultural Revolution activism, along with RAPP, were the Communist Academy and the Institute of Red Professors, scholarly institutions whose specific purpose was to train and advance a communist intelligentsia. Although Stalin had contact with some of these activists, and perhaps even toyed with the idea of establishing his own “school” of young communist intellectuals, he was also suspicious of them as a group because of their involvement in party infighting and their admiration for the party’s two most renowned intellectuals and theorists, Trotsky and Bukharin. The young communist professors and graduate students did their best to shake up their disciplines, which were almost exclusively in the humanities and social sciences rather than the natural sciences, and to challenge their “bourgeois” teachers. In the social sciences, this challenge was usually mounted in the name of Marxism, but in remote areas such as music theory the challenge might come from an outsider group whose ideas had no Marxist underpinning.

  Long-standing disagreements over theory and research took on new urgency, and many visionary schemes that challenged accepted ideas found institutional support for the first time. In architecture, utopian planning flourished. Legal theorists speculated about the imminent dissolution of law, while a similar movement in education for the dissolution of the school did considerable practical damage to the school system. Under the impact of the Cultural Revolution, Russian cultural officials dealing with the reindeer-herding small peoples of the north switched to an interventionist policy of active transformation of the native culture and lifestyle. In ecology, the Cultural Revolution exposed conservationists to attack by militants inspired by the ideology of transforming nature.

  In 1931 and 1932, official support for class-war Cultural Revolution came to an end. Professional institutions were in shambles, and little work was being produced. In industry, with so many workers being promoted and sent to university, there was a shortage of skilled workers left in the factories. In June 1931 Stalin officially rehabilitated

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  CUSTINE, ASTOLPHE LOUIS LEONOR

  the bourgeois engineers; in April 1932, RAPP and other proletarian cultural organizations were dissolved. Many of the radicals who had been instrumental in attacking established authority during the Cultural Revolution were accused of deviation and removed from positions of influence. Bourgeois specialists who had been fired or arrested were allowed to return to work. In education, radical theories were repudiated and traditional norms reestablished, and policies of aggressive proletarian recruitment were quietly dropped.

  But although this was the end of the radical antibourgeois Cultural Revolution, it was hardly a return to the way things had been before. Academic freedom had been seriously curtailed, and party control over cultural and scholarly institutions tightened. Thousands of young workers, peasants, and communists (vydvizhentsy) had been sent to higher education or promoted into administrative jobs. During the Great Purges of 1937-1938, many activists of the Cultural Revolution perished (often denounced by resentful colleagues), though others survived in influential positions in cultural and academic administration. But the cohort of vyd-vizhentsy, particularly those trained in engineering who graduated in the first half of the 1930s, were prime, albeit unwitting, beneficiaries of the Great Purges. Members of this cohort, sometimes known as “the B
rezhnev generation,” entered top party, government, and professional positions at the end of the 1930s and continued to dominate the political elite for close to half a century. See also: COLLECTIVIZATION; CONSTRUCTIVISM; FELLOW TRAVELERS; INDUSTRIALIZATION

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Clark, Katerina. (1995). Petersburg: Crucible of Cultural Revolution. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. David-Fox, Michael. (1999). “What Is Cultural Revolution?” Russian Review 58(2):181-201. Fitzpatrick, Sheila. (1974). “Cultural Revolution in Russia, 1928-1932.” Journal of Contemporary History 9(1):33-52. Fitzpatrick, Sheila, ed. (1978). Cultural Revolution in Russia, 1928-1931. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Fitzpatrick, Sheila. (1999). “Cultural Revolution Revisited.” Russian Review 58(2):202-209. Gorbunov, V. I. (1969). Lenin on the Cultural Revolution. Moscow: Novosti. Joravsky, David. (1985). “Cultural Revolution and the Fortress Mentality.” In Bolshevik Culture: Experiment and Order in the Russian Revolution, ed. Abbott Glea-son; Peter Kenez; and Richard Stites. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Kim, Maksim Pavlovich. (1984). Socialism and Culture. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences. Lewis, Robert. (1986). “Science, Nonscience, and the Cultural Revolution.” Slavic Review 45(2):286-292. Meisner, Maurice. (1985). “Iconoclasm and Cultural Revolution in China and Russia.” In Bolshevik Culture: Experiment and Order in the Russian Revolution, ed. Abbott Gleason; Peter Kenez; and Richard Stites. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Slezkine, Yuri. (1992). “From Savages to Citizens: The Cultural Revolution in the Soviet Far North, 1928-1938.” Slavic Review 51(1):52-76. Weiner, Douglas R. (1988). Models of Nature: Ecology, Conservation, and Cultural Revolution in Soviet Russia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

  SHEILA FITZPATRICK BEN ZAJICEK

  CUMANS See POLOVTSY. CURRENCY See ALTYN; DENGA; GRIVNA; KOPECK; MONETARY SYSTEM, SOVIET; RUBLE.

 

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