Britanskii Soiuznik Explained

Frequency:Weekly
Category:Propaganda magazine
Company:British Ministry of Information
Founded:1942
Firstdate:10 July 1942
Finaldate:1950
Language:Russian

Britanskii Soiuznik (Russian: British Ally) was a weekly British propaganda periodical which existed between 1942 and 1950.

History and profile

Britanskii Soiuznik was launched by the British Ministry of Information in 1942.[1] [2] The first issue appeared on 10 July that year. The magazine was established as a result of the Soviet–British Treaty signed in 1942.[3] Another publication entitled Britanskaia Khronika (Russian: The British Chronicle) was also started in the framework of this treaty.[4]

Its stated goal was to tell the Russians the daily life of British people to establish a friendly relationship between two nations.[5] George Reavey was the director of Britanskii Soiuznik which was published in Russian on a weekly basis.[6] The magazine contained articles about military and cultural events emphasizing the collaboration between the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union and featured writings of the British writers. Children's literature by the British writers was also featured in the magazine.

Britanskii Soiuznik gained popularity among Russians in addition to the US propaganda publication Amerika.[7] The popularity of Britanskii Soiuznik was not welcomed by the Soviet authorities from November 1946, and Viktor Abakumov, minister of state security, informed Joseph Stalin and Andrei Zhdanov about its increasing influence among the Soviet citizens. Abakumov asked them to take steps to restrict its effects and sales. Upon this the Soviet Department for Agitation and Propaganda fabricated a reader letter which contained negative statements about the magazine. This fake letter was approved by Stalin and sent to the editor of Britanskii Soiuznik.[8] The criticisms against the magazine by the Soviet officials continued after this incident.[8]

Britanskii Soiuznik reached the circulation of 14,000 copies in 1946 and had readers mostly in Moscow and in a few other Soviet cities. Its circulation was 50,000 copies in 1949.[2]

Britanskii Soiuznik folded in 1950 due to tense relations between the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union.[3] [9]

Notes and References

  1. Book: John Jenks. British Propaganda and News Media in the Cold War. 2006. Edinburgh University Press. 22. Edinburgh. 9780748626755. 10.1515/9780748626755.
  2. Leonid T. Trofimov. The Soviet media at the onset of the Cold War, 1945–1950. 2004. 65,163. PhD. 978-0-496-87103-2. . University of Illinois Chicago.
  3. Book: Sarah Davies. Simo Mikkonen. Pia Koivunen. 2015. Berghahn Books. Beyond the divide: Entangled histories of Cold War Europe. New York; London. 978-1-78238-866-1. 218. The Soviet Union Encounters Anglia: Britain’s Russian Magazine as a Medium for Cross-Border Communication. Sarah Davies (historian). https://books.google.com/books?id=xXlpCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA218.
  4. Vladimir O. Pechatnov. The Rise and Fall of Britansky Soyuznik: A Case Study in Soviet Response to British Propaganda of the Mid-1940s. The Historical Journal. 1998. 41. 1. 293–301. 10.1017/S0018246X97007577. 2640154. 159914237.
  5. Pauline Fairclough. Brothers in musical arms: the wartime correspondence of Dmitrii Shostakovich and Henry Wood. Russian Journal of Communication. August 2016. 8. 3. 10.1080/19409419.2016.1213219. 85–86. 151854691 . 1983/373f474d-3a4b-4078-b82a-ee55df7d5a7f. free.
  6. Book: Pamela Davidson. The Life of Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago. 2009. 85. Berkeley Slavic Specialties. Oakland, CA. 9781572010802. https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/18792/. Pasternak’s letters to C.M. Bowra (1945–1956). Lazar Fleishman. Lazar Fleishman.
  7. Alexey Tikhomirov. Book review. October 2015. The Slavonic and East European Review. 93. 4. 779.
  8. Vladimir O. Pechatnov. 19. Exercise in Frustration: Soviet Foreign Propaganda in the Early Cold War, 1945-47. Cold War History. 1. 2. 2001. 10.1080/713999921. 153657729 .
  9. Book: Elena Goodwin. Translating England into Russian: The Politics of Children's Literature in the Soviet Union and Modern Russia. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2019. 978-1-350-13401-0. London. 61–62.