“ART BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE!” THE SOVIET CULTURAL POLICY AND ESTONIAN COMMUNITY HOUSES Cover Image

“ART BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE!” THE SOVIET CULTURAL POLICY AND ESTONIAN COMMUNITY HOUSES
“ART BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE!” THE SOVIET CULTURAL POLICY AND ESTONIAN COMMUNITY HOUSES

Author(s): Egge Kulbok-Lattik
Subject(s): Politics, Policy, planning, forecast and speculation, Rural and urban sociology, Sociology of Culture, History of Communism
Published by: Latvijas Kultūras akadēmija
Keywords: History of cultural policy; Estonian community houses; sovietization;

Summary/Abstract: Estonian community houses were built in towns and the countryside by the local people, who had been joining cultural and other societies since the second half of the 19th century. These cultural centres supported the process of building the Estonian state. The space for culture became basis for the lifelong learning system of informal education, which later was regulated and developed according to the politics of culture and education in the Estonian nation-state (1918–40) and the Soviet Union (1940–91). After the invasion of the Baltic States by the Soviet Union in 1940, extensive restructuring or sovietization of the Estonian public administration, economy and culture began. The article examines the sovietization process of Estonian community houses, i.e., how they were turned into the ideological tools of Soviet totalitarian propaganda.

  • Issue Year: 9/2016
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 100-125
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English