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Village and the Class War: Anti-Kulak Campaign in Estonia 1944-49 [Kietas viršelis]

(Centre for Baltic and East European Studies at Södertörn University, Sweden)
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Before collectivization of agriculture in Estonia, kulaks (better-off farmers) were persecuted and many of them were finally deported in March 1949. This book is situated on the local level; the aim is to understand what these processes meant from the perspective of the Estonian rural population, a kind of study that has been missing so far. Analyzes the mechanisms of repression, applying new aspects. Repression was mainly conducted through a bureaucratic process where individual denunciations were not even necessary. The main tool of persecution was a screening of the rural population with the help of records, censuses and local knowledge, in order to identify, or invent, kulak families. Moreover, in the Estonian sources, the World War II history of each individual was a crucial part of screenings. The prisoners of war of the Red Army, held in camps in Estonia, played an unexpected part in this campaign. Another result is a so far neglected wave of peaceful resistance as the kulak identifications were challenged in 1947-48. This has not been addressed in the existing literature. The results mainly answer the question how this process worked, whereas the question why finds hypothetical responses in the life trajectories of actors.

Recenzijos

"The blurb on the dust jacket of this important study of collectivization in Estonia in 1947-1949 lauds it for contributing to Baltic history by showing how everyday Estonians also participated as subjects in Stalinist terror. This Anu Mai Kõll indeed does, and very effectively; she also looks at how and why so many ordinary people participated in the brutality. But more important is the book's contribution to the growing historiography of collectivization, particularly collectivization beyond the classic case of the Soviet 1930s." * American Historical Review * "Kõll questions the degree to which the campaign in Estonia was class-driven and implemented by outsiders. Through careful comparison of local evidence from three local soviets in Viljandi, she finds substantial variation in dekulakization, including the criteria used in kulak selection and the numbers of those so identified. Within this context she uncovers both collaboration and a surprising degree of resistance by local leaders and the village population. One of the most interesting discoveries is the numerous letters supporting appeals for reconsideration of those labeled as kulaks, including letters by the very local soviet officials who selected them. The book underscores the impact of German occupation on dekulakization in Estonia. Kõll consistently finds that using Red Army POWs during the German occupation and other behavior which might be interpreted as pro-German led to kulak status. The consequences of living between Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II scarred Estonian society not only during the war, but continued to shape the destinies of Estonians until the collapse of the USSR." * Russian Review * "Focusing on three townships in Estonias Viljandi County, Anu Mai Kõll demonstrates how the Soviet regime, despite its shortages in manpower and lack of legitimacy among the subject population, attempted to create a new society in rural Estonia. Yet this study is not only about the victims of Soviet power; it is also about the participants in the creation of Estonias new order. Directly addressing an earlier historiography that has sometimes portrayed dekulakization in ethnic terms (Russians versus Estonians) or as a matter of locals struggling against the imperatives of the center, Kõll demonstrates that while decision makers in Moscow made the choice to persecute local populations, 'the implementation and its consequences were on the other hand strictly local.' Participation was simply the least bad option for local Estonian administrators (many of whom were not members of the Communist Party) who had to consider the fate of their own families and thus needed to demonstrate their loyalty to the new system. For rural Estonians, the late 1940s was a time of confl icting loyalties (victims and participants were often closely related) and unpredictable outcomes. The local community 'was not united against Soviet officials; it was still negotiating the boundaries of the permissible.' According to Kõll, the story of Soviet repression in Estonia was not about evil persons and denouncements; it was about a drawn-out bureaucratic process that 'was carried out through a systematic screening of the entire population with the help of records, archives and local knowledge'. 'The face of evil,' she concludes, 'seemed to be more bureaucratic than personal'. * Slavic Review *

List of Tables and Graphs ix
List of Photographs xi
Preface 1(2)
1 The Land Question in Estonia 3(34)
1.1 Agriculture and the First Soviet Year 1940-41
4(4)
1.2 Nazi Occupation 1941-1944
8(4)
1.3 Reconstruction of Soviet Estonia
12(1)
1.4 Estonians Living in the Soviet Union
13(4)
1.5 Land Reform 1944-45
17(3)
1.6 The Anti-kulak Campaign 1947-49
20(5)
1.7 Deportation
25(3)
1.8 The Aim of the Book
28(4)
1.9 The Local Study
32(1)
1.10 Organization of the Book
33(4)
2 Soviet Repression as a Special Case of State Violence 37(34)
2.1 Research into Violence in the Soviet System
40(4)
2.2 Kulaks and Collectivisation in 1929-32
44(8)
2.3 The Estonian Anti-kulak Campaign
52(6)
2.4 Comparing Anti-kulak Campaigns in 1929-32 and 1947-49
58
2.5 Aspects Pursued in this Local Study
51(9)
2.6 The Soviet Estonian Archives
60(11)
3 The Anti-kulak Campaign 71(42)
3.1 Seizing Power
74(3)
3.2 Local Authorities
77(3)
3.3 The Land Reform
80(4)
3.4 Persecution of the Kulaks Begins
84(6)
3.5 Was there Freedom of Action?
90(1)
3.6 Appeals against kulak status
91(5)
3.7 The Kulak Taxes
96(4)
3.8 The Exclusion of Kulaks
100(3)
3.9 From Campaign to Deportation
103(3)
3.10 Liquidation of the Kulaks
106(1)
3.11 The Extent of Local Participation
107(6)
4 Inventing Kulaks 113(46)
4.1 The Process
116(2)
4.2 The Voices of Kulaks
118(2)
4.3 The Appeals
120(3)
4.4 Retroactive Soviet Law
123(2)
4.5 Negotiations Concerning Exploitation
125(2)
4.6 Negotiations Concerning Prisoners of War
127(5)
4.7 The Political Criteria
132(9)
4.8 Kulak Strategies
141(5)
4.9 Negotiation as Participation
146(1)
4.10 The Result of Negotiations: Kulak Declarations
147(8)
4.11 Conclusions
155(4)
5 Participation at the Local Level 159(42)
5.1 The Local Nomenklatura
162(4)
5.2 The Cadre Policy
166(4)
5.3 The Reluctant Henchman
170(3)
5.4 The Ambitious Bureaucrat
173(3)
5.5 The Tender Wolf
176(2)
5.6 Persecute or Perish
178(3)
5.7 Persecution as a Social Process
181(4)
5.8 Communist Party and Councils in Viljandi County
185(6)
5.9 The Security Forces
191(3)
5.10 Why did Local People Participate?
194(7)
6 Epilogue of March 1949 201(30)
6.1 Rapid Collectivisation
203(5)
6.2 Division of the Spoils
208(1)
6.3 Stepping Out of Line
209(1)
6.4 Not on the Deportation List
210(6)
6.5 A Normal Stalinist Purge
216(7)
6.6 The Purge of ECP in 1950
223(3)
6.7 Lessons of the Campaign
226(5)
7 The Grammar of Terror 231(30)
7.1 Responsibility and Participation
234(1)
7.2 Participation and Discourse
235(3)
7.3 Participation in a Bureaucratic Procedure
238(2)
7.4 Participants-How did They Get There?
240(8)
7.5 Openness and Legitimacy
248(3)
7.6 The Importance of War
251(3)
7.7 A Grammar of Terror?
254(7)
Appendixes 261(12)
Bibliography 273(8)
Index 281
9780719086250
List of figures ix
Acknowledgements x
Notes on contributors xi
A note on the texts xv
Introduction 1(14)
Catherine Maxwell
Stefano Evangelista
I Cultural discourse
1 Swinburne's French voice: cosmopolitanism and cultural mediation in aesthetic criticism
15(18)
Stefano Evangelista
2 Swinburne's swimmers: from insular peace to the Anglo-Boer War
33(19)
Julia F. Saville
3 Swinburne: a nineteenth-century Hellene?
52(17)
Charlotte Ribeyrol
4 'A juggler's trick'? Swinburne's journalism 1857-75
69(26)
Laurel Brake
II Form
5 Metrical discipline: Algernon Swinburne on 'The Flogging-Block'
95(30)
Yopie Prins
6 What goes around: Swinburne's A Century of Roundels
125(13)
Herbert F. Tucker
7 Desire lines: Swinburne and lyric crisis
138(19)
Marion Thain
III Influence
8 'Good Satan': the unlikely poetic affinity of Swinburne and Christina Rossetti
157(17)
Dinah Roe
9 Parleying with Robert Browning: Swinburne's aestheticism, blasphemy, and the dramatic monologue
174(19)
Sara Lyons
10 Whose muse? Sappho, Swinburne, and Amy Lowell
193(20)
Sarah Parker
11 Atmosphere and absorption: Swinburne, Eliot, Drinkwater
213(19)
Catherine Maxwell
References 232(20)
Index 252
Anu Mai Kõll is Professor of Baltic History and Director of the Centre for Baltic and East European Studies at Södertörn University, Sweden.