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  2. Anti-Sovietism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Sovietism

    - Nazi propaganda poster in Russian for occupied Soviet territories. Polish anti-Soviet propaganda poster during the Polish–Soviet War, depicting Leon Trotsky. [a] Anti-Sovietism or anti-Soviet sentiment are activities that were actually or allegedly aimed against the Soviet Union or government power within the Soviet Union. [1]

  3. Posters in the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posters_in_the_Soviet_Union

    Posters used the language spoken in the region they were to be used in, and thus propaganda posters using the Arabic and Latin scripts exist, in addition to Cyrillic. [ 15 ] [ 18 ] Arabic script in posters had begun to be phased out by the 1930s, as the Soviet government promoted Latin-based scripts for speakers of languages such as Azerbaijani ...

  4. USSR anti-religious campaign (1958–1964) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USSR_anti-religious...

    The 21st Congress brought in a new, radical programme of anti-religious propaganda that would stay in place for the next twenty-five years. [13]A new anti-religious periodical appeared in 1959 called Science and Religion (Nauka i Religiia), which followed in the tradition of Bezbozhnik in aggressiveness and vulgarity, but was much less vicious.

  5. Propaganda in the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_in_the_Soviet_Union

    Young Pioneers, with their slogan: "Prepare to fight for the cause of the Communist Party" An important goal of Soviet propaganda was to create a New Soviet man.Schools and Communist youth organizations such as the Young Pioneers and Komsomol served to remove children from the "petit-bourgeois" family and indoctrinate the next generation into the "collective way of life".

  6. A lonely radio nerd. A poet. Vladimir Putin's crackdown ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/lonely-radio-nerd-poet-vladimir...

    Some human rights advocates compare the scale of the clampdown to the repression from the 1960s to the 1980s, when dissidents were prosecuted for “anti-Soviet propaganda.” THREE YEARS IN ...

  7. The Fall of Berlin (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fall_of_Berlin_(film)

    The Fall of Berlin (Russian: Падение Берлина, romanized: Padeniye Berlina) is a 1950 Soviet war and propaganda film, in two parts separated in the manner of a serial. [1] It was produced by Mosfilm Studio and directed by Mikheil Chiaureli, with a script written by Pyotr Pavlenko and a musical score composed by Dmitri Shostakovich.

  8. Anti-Soviet agitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Soviet_agitation

    Shortly after the Sinyavsky-Daniel show trial, the Soviet Penal Code was augmented with Article 190–1, Dissemination of knowingly false fabrications that defame the Soviet state and social system (1966), which was a weaker version of Article 70. It basically repeated the Article 70, with the omitted provision of the "anti-Soviet purpose".

  9. Paix et Liberté - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paix_et_Liberté

    Paix et Liberté published, distributed and posted hundreds of thousands of posters in France in the 1950s. These posters were reproduced in the form of vignettes, attacking the Soviet Union and communist ideology, but also the French Communist Party and its leaders, such as Maurice Thorez and Jacques Duclos, accusing them of being agents of the USSR.