
Stalin and the Soviet Science Wars / Ethan Pollock
Focusing on six major postwar debates in the Soviet scientific community, this book shows that Stalin's forays into scholarship can be understood only within the context of international tensions, institutional conflicts, and the growing uncertainty about the proper relationship between scienti...
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Główni autorzy: | Pollock, Ethan |
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Format: | Książka |
Język: | English |
Wydane: | Princeton, N.J. [u.a.] : Princeton University Press, 2006 |
Hasła przedmiotowe: | |
Dostęp online: | Table of contents only Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Streszczenie: | Focusing on six major postwar debates in the Soviet scientific community, this book shows that Stalin's forays into scholarship can be understood only within the context of international tensions, institutional conflicts, and the growing uncertainty about the proper relationship between scientific knowledge and Party-dictated truths.. - Between 1945 and 1953, while the Soviet Union confronted postwar reconstruction and Cold War crises, its unchallenged leader Joseph Stalin carved out time to study scientific disputes and dictate academic solutions. He spearheaded a discussion of "scientific" Marxist-Leninist philosophy, edited reports on genetics and physiology, adjudicated controversies about modern physics, and wrote essays on linguistics and political economy. Historians have been tempted to dismiss all this as the megalomaniacal ravings of a dying dictator. But in "Stalin and the Soviet Science Wars", Ethan Pollock draws on thousands of previously unexplored archival documents to demonstrate that Stalin was in fact determined to show how scientific truth and Party doctrine reinforced one another. Socialism was supposed to be scientific, and science ideologically correct, and Stalin ostensibly embodied the perfect symbiosis between power and knowledge |
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Deskrypcja: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Opis fizyczny: | VIII, 269 S. Ill |
ISBN: | 9780691124674 |