Tobias Rupprecht: Die Sowjetunion und die Welt im Kalten Krieg
Until recently, research in the field of Soviet
social history on the one side and Cold War historiography on the other side
went separate ways. Experts on the Soviet Union focused on the inner history of
primarily Stalinism, whereas diplomatic and military historians dominated Cold
War research with a strong bias for the Western perspective.
This research reports seeks to give an overview
of contemporary scholarship that tries to overcome that divide, outlining new
trajectories and pointing at potential backlogs.
In a first step, it presents a number of new
monographs on the Cold War and asks to which extent they incorporate the Soviet
point of view and social historical phenomena of the so called home front
of the Cold War. Most research on the Cold War now uses a multiperspective
approach, it gives analytical room also to actors on the Soviet and Third World
side of the conflict, it takes their ideological mindsets seriously and it has
discovered cultural diplomacy as a meaningful source to reconstruct them.
Repercussions on Soviet society beyond political decision makers and party
ideologues, however, are still largely absent from most Cold War monographs
The second paragraph then changes perspectives,
assembling recent literature from historians of the Soviet Union who have transnationally broadened their view and analysed aspects of relations between the Soviet Union and
the (Third) World. While most work is still traditional diplomatic history,
there is also a tendency towards an examination of individual and group
interactions across the Iron Curtain, and of Soviet perceptions of the world
abroad through modern media and literature.
A last paragraph finally discusses the contribution
a transnationally amended Soviet history could make
to the debate on global history. The Soviet path to modernity did not happen in
a completely sealed-off world, it shared indeed many phenomena with the Western
one. At the same time, a global history of the second half of the 20th century
needs to consider the world wide fascination for and fear of the Soviet
economic and social project.
>> zurück zum Inhaltsverzeichnis des Bandes