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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Journal of Modern History
    Angaben zur Quelle: 95,4 (2023) 847-886
    Keywords: Slánský, Rudolf Trials, litigation, etc. ; Antisemitism History 1945- ; Jewish communists ; Trials (Political crimes and offenses) ; Jews History 1945-
    Abstract: In November 1952, former General Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia Rudolf Slánský and thirteen other prominent Communist Party leaders underwent a widely publicized political trial. Slánský featured as the alleged ringleader of a conspiracy of “Trotskyist-Titoist Zionists, bourgeois-nationalist traitors” working on behalf of “American imperialists.” Following the trial, eleven of the fourteen defendants, among them Slánský, were hanged and the ashes of their bodies strewn along a road leading out of Prague. The remaining three received life sentences. Eleven of the original fourteen defendants, the prosecutor declared, were “of Jewish origin.” Up to now, the surprisingly sparse scholarship on the Slánský trial has argued that Slánský’s November 1951 arrest, as well as the antisemitic tone of the trial, were engineered primarily by Soviet advisors and Joseph Stalin himself. This article, which draws upon previously ignored archival materials in the former Soviet Union and a fresh, post–Cold War reading of archival materials in today’s Czech Republic, argues instead that local dynamics within the Czechoslovak Communist Party were paramount. Specifically, it focuses on how and why Czechoslovak Communist members denounced one another to Soviet officials, and how these denunciations laid the groundwork for Slánský’s downfall while breaking the previous taboo within the party on antisemitic rhetoric. It thus reveals much about the nature of the Czechoslovak-Soviet relationship, as well as relationships between other countries of Communist Eastern Europe and Moscow, before Stalin’s death in 1953—relationships that were not as one-sided as many scholars and others beyond academia often assume.
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781978830806 , 9781978830790
    Language: English
    Pages: viii, 270 Seiten
    Year of publication: 2022
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 947/.004924
    RVK:
    Keywords: Geschichte 1945-1989 ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Kommunismus ; Juden ; Judentum ; Identität ; Ostblock ; Sowjetunion ; Geschichte 1945-1989
    Abstract: Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Introduction / Kateřina Čapková, Kamil Kijek, and Stephan Stach -- Part I: Periphery and Center -- 1. A New Life? The Pre-Holocaust Past and Post-Holocaust Present in the Life of the Jewish Community of Dzierzoniów, Lower Silesia, 1945-1950 / Kamil Kijek -- 2. Erased from History: Jewish Migrants in Postwar Czechoslovakia / Kateřina Čapková -- 3. On the Borders of Legality: Connections between Traditional Culture and the Informal Economy in Jewish Life in the Soviet Provinces / Valery Dymshits -- Part II: Perceptions of Jewishness -- 4. From Friends to Enemies? The Soviet State and Its Jews in the Aftermath of the Holocaust / Diana Dumitru -- 5. "I Was Not Like Everybody Else": Soviet Jewish Doctors Remember the Doctors' Plot / Anna Shternshis -- 6. "After Auschwitz You Must Take Your Origins Seriously": Perceptions of Jewishness among Communists of Jewish Origin in the Early German Democratic Republic / Anna Koch -- 7. Being Jewish in Soviet Birobidzhan: Between Stigma and Cynicism / Agata Maksimowska -- Part III: Transnationalism -- 8. An Alternative World: Jews in the German Democratic Republic, Their Transnational Networks, and a Global Jewish Communist Community / David Shneer -- 9. Soviet Yiddish Cultural Diplomacy in the Post-Stalinist 1950s / Gennady Estraikh -- 10. Family Discourse, Migration, and Nation-Building in Poland and Israel in the Late 1950s / Marcos Silber -- Part IV: Dissidents -- 11. Three Jewish Social Networks: A (Non-) Encounter in Malakhovka / Galina Zelenina -- 12. The Opposition of the Opposition: New Jewish Identities in the Illegal Underground Public Sphere in Late Communist Hungary / Kata Bohus -- Acknowledgments -- Notes on Contributors -- Index
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