File:Idn.duke.edu Soviet propaganda poster - Ironical on Christmas Atheist magazine 1920s Radako Рождественский петрушка Приложение к журналу Безбожник у станка No known copyright.jpg

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English: Ironical Poster on Christmas, a Soviet propaganda poster published as supplement to the "Atheist at Work" journal (Bezbozhnik u Stanka)
  • Russian:
Поповская сказка о "Рождестве Христовым" нужна ка- питалистам и помещикам для затемнения классового сознания трудящихся, для рабского их угнетения, по- виновения и покорности.
Борьба против религии борьба за социализм.
Рождественский Петрушка.
English:
The Popov's Tale about "The Birth of Christ" is needed by capitalists and landlords to obscure the class consciousness of the working people, to oppress them in a slave-like manner, to make them feel guilty and submissive.
The struggle against religion is the struggle for socialism.
Christmas Petrushka.'
  • Bezbozhnik u Stanka (Russian: «Безбожник у станка»; "The Godless at the Workbench") was an anti-religious and atheistic magazine of the Moscow Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Published from December 1923 to 1931, it circulated roughly 35 thousand to 70 thousand copies per issue.
  • Date: Unknown
  • Creator: A. A. Radakov (А. А. Радако́в)
  • Description: Moskva: Gosizdat RSFSR "Moskovskii Rabochii"; 15-ia lit. “Mospoligraf”
  • See Wikipedia articles about The propaganda in the Soviet Union, USSR anti-religious campaign (1921–1928), and Christmas in Russia
  • Duke University Libraries Repository collections and archives: Russian Posters Collection, 1919-1989 (General Political Poster Series, 1919-1930 and undated): This collection of 20th-century Russian posters spans almost the entire history of the Soviet Union (1917-1991). It can be divided into three main series, each representing distinct eras in the history of Communist political advertising. The General Political Poster series features works from the earliest days of Soviet power and is especially strong for the late 1920s, a period that coincides with the "cultural revolution" of I. V. Stalin.(...)
Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina, the United States.
  • Alexey Alexandrovich Radakov. No known copyright restrictions.
Date 1920s
date QS:P,+1920-00-00T00:00:00Z/8
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https://idn.duke.edu/ark:/87924/r4pn90b8k

Duke University Libraries Repository collections and archives: Russian Posters Collection, 1919-1989
Author A. A. Radakov (Alexey Alexandrovich Radakov, Алексей Александрович Радаков, 1877 — 1942). No known copyright restrictions.

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