Polish censorship during the late Stalinist Period
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2021.115Abstract
The aim of the study was to present selected aspects of the history of censorship in Poland during the Stalinist period (1948−1956). The article presents the circumstances of the establishment of the censorship office in Poland – the Central Office for the Control of Press, Publications and Events (GUKPPiW) – which was established in January 1945 and operated throughout the period of the Polish People’s Republic, until April 1990. An answer was also given to the question about the role of the so-called Soviet advisers who came to Lublin in December 1944 and took full control of the process of creating state censorship. The employees of the Soviet censorship sent from Moscow were tasked with creating an institution that would control the media and operate according to the mechanisms established in the USSR. In the process of creating the censorship apparatus, the Polish communists played a marginal and servant role towards the Soviet military (including General N. Bulganin) and advisers who came from Moscow. The most important decisions were made by the employees of Glavlit, whose orders were treated by the management of the Polish Workers’ Party as orders. Glavlit officers, who came to Lublin in December 1944, recruited censorship employees, developed instructions for them, rules for publishing and issuing printed works and drafted a decree on the control of the press, publications and performances, a draft order of the minister of public security regarding the introduction of censorship. The work also describes the process of recruiting censors, as well as the reasons and scope of censorship interventions and the sources of instruction.
Keywords:
the Central Office for the Control of Press, Publications and Events, the Stalinist period in Poland, censorship office in Poland
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Articles of "Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History" are open access distributed under the terms of the License Agreement with Saint Petersburg State University, which permits to the authors unrestricted distribution and self-archiving free of charge.