Soviets in Space: The People of the USSR and the Race to the Moon
Turbett, Colin
Soviets in Space: The People of the USSR and the Race to the Moon
Turbett, Colin
The victory over Nazi Germany in 1945, in which the Soviet Union played both the greatest part and suffered the greatest losses, found the country in a state of devastation. Military strength could not compensate for the damage wreaked by war, especially in the western areas of the USSR. Within just over ten years, not only was Stalin dead and the relative freedoms of the Khrushchev ‘Thaw’ in progress, but the Soviet Union was ahead in the Space Race -beating the enormous wealth and resources of the USA, launching Soviet citizens from ordinary backgrounds quite literally into worlds beyond our own. The communist dream seemed alive and well. The story of those years has rarely been told from a Soviet perspective: Cold War journalism and historical accounts written in the West tend to portray the space race in terms of ideological competition - with success and failure mirroring power and influence in a world divided between capitalism and communism. Whilst the military on both sides certainly benefited from the cutting edge technological advance of the space programmes, for the people of the USSR the prestige of their successes offered proof that ‘real existing socialism’ was moving mankind onto new levels of peaceful progress. Agriculture and railway building initiatives tried to involved ordinary people in other pioneering projects to build socialism before the dream shattered in the 1980s. Extensively illustrated with images from the time, this book looks at the years of Soviet space success, their background, the personalities involved, and their impact on the ordinary people of the USSR. AUTHOR: Colin Turbett spent a long career as a front line social worker in the West of Scotland and retains some involvement in that field, having authored a number of published academic papers and books related to his work. As a lifelong motorcyclist with an interest in social history he is the author of ‘Motorcycles and Motorcycling in the USSR 1939-1990’ (Veloce) and ‘Playing with the Boys - Olga Kevelos Motorcycle Sportswoman’. He has long held an interest in the history of the Soviet Union and its people. Following the publication of ‘Red Star at War’ and ‘The Anglo-Soviet Alliance’, this is his third book for Pen and Sword.
100 b/w illustrations
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