During Stalin's Great Terror, accusations of treason struck fear
in the hearts of Soviet citizens-and lengthy imprisonment or firing
squads often followed. Many of the accused sealed their fates by
agreeing to confessions after torture or interrogation by the NKVD.
Some, however, gave up without a fight.
In Stalinist Confessions, Igal Halfin investigates the
phenomenon of a mass surrender to the will of the state. He
deciphers the skillfully rendered discourse through which Stalin
defined his cult of personality and consolidated his power by
building a grassroots base of support and instilling a collective
psyche in every citizen. By rooting out evil (opposition) wherever
it hid, good communists could realize purity, morality, and their
place in the greatest society in history. Confessing to trumped-up
charges, comrades made willing sacrifices to their belief in
socialism and the necessity of finding and making examples of its
enemies.
Halfin focuses his study on Leningrad Communist University as a
microcosm of Soviet society. Here, eager students proved their
loyalty to the new socialism by uncovering opposition within the
University. Through their meetings and self-reports, students
sought to become Stalin's New Man.
Using his exhaustive research in Soviet archives including NKVD
records, party materials, student and instructor journals, letters,
and newspapers, Halfin examines the transformation in the language
of Stalinist socialism. From an initial attitude that dismissed
dissent as an error in judgment and redeemable through contrition
to a doctrine where members of the opposition became innately
wicked and their reform impossible, Stalin's socialism now defined
loyalty in strictly black and white terms. Collusion or allegiance
(real or contrived, now or in the past) with "enemies of the
people" (Trotsky, Zinoviev, Bukharin, Germans, capitalists) was
unforgivable. The party now took to the task of purging itself with
ever-increasing zeal.
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