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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 9 page paper describes life of the average person during the time of Stalin's reign. Clothing, food, entertainment, employment of the everyday family living in Kiev during the 1930's as well as brief facts about the history of Kiev and its survival of several wars. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_mbussr30.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and economic system, let alone be born into a time of such turbulence. During the 1930s a child born into a Russian family would live through what could arguably be
called a turbulent time, written in the pages of history with the blood of many of her own countrymen. This child would have experienced Stalins ferocity, experienced the working of
the Bolshevik, been witness to the beginning of hostilities with Germany and the begin of W.W.II. This child would also have been influenced by the Russian Orthodox Church and such
socialist realism painters as Raphael Soyer,and Isaac Soyer. Most families were agriculturally based, and by the mid-1920s there were very few people who could be truly considered a middle class.
By 1926 the Russian middle class had been eliminated, which could have been a source for investment capital, 78% of the Russian population live in the agricultural sector. The vast
majority of Russian farmers framed on private plots and produced private surpluses(Stalins Policy 1930). Life would have been fairly harsh, equating the life of a 1930s farm family to the
life of an American farm family of the previous century. Stalin and Lenin left in the wake of the philosophical and political machinisms a country that was so devastated by
the internal and external wars that were being waged that she could barely support herself. Needless to say, a child of this time would not necessarily have noticed that times
were tough, but for his parents, it was a time of great sparseness. Most of what was grown on the farm, the farmers did not get to keep, but gathered
it to send into the ministry of agricultures storage warehouses. One can only imagine how this must have galled the farm who labored for so long under such bitter conditions
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