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Undid revision 295297745 by Biophys (talk) I already explained that the GSE noted Glavlit. Do you want a link?
I cited my source (Richard Pipes, (1995), Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime, New York: Vintage Books, Random House Inc., ISBN 0-394-50242-6, page 297). Please cite your source.
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==Reliability of information==
==Reliability of information==
The entire content of Encyclopedia was heavily controlled by the Soviet [[censorship]] agency [[Glavlit]] for consistency with the [[CPSU|Communist Party]] line.{{Fact|date=June 2009}}
The entire content of Encyclopedia was heavily controlled by the Soviet [[censorship]] agency [[Glavlit]] for consistency with the [[CPSU|Communist Party]] line. However, the Encyclopedia did not even mention the existence of Glavlit. Instead, it asserted:<br />&nbsp;

{{Quotation2|The October Revolution put an end to both tsarist and bourgeois censorship<ref>Pipes, Richard (1995), Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime, New York: Vintage Books, Random House Inc., ISBN 0-394-50242-6, page 297.</ref>}}


The Great Soviet Encyclopedia had a strong pro-communist bias, which "is apparent on almost every subject consulted".<ref>Allen Kent, Harold Lancour, Jay E. Daily, ''Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 25'' CRC Press, 1978, ISBN 0824720253, [http://books.google.com/books?id=l8mIFaw53JUC&pg=PA171&dq=%22Great+Soviet+Encyclopedia%22+bias&as_brr=3&ei=QSksSrrINo-6ygTojfz7Cw&hl=pl Google Print, p.171]</ref><ref>Bill Katz, William A. Katz, Ruth A. Fraley, ''Evaluation of reference services'', Haworth Press, 1984, ISBN 0866563776, [http://books.google.com/books?id=2C4-Pq8N8MMC&pg=PA308&dq=%22Great+Soviet+Encyclopedia%22+bias&as_brr=3&ei=QSksSrrINo-6ygTojfz7Cw&hl=pl Google Print, p.308]</ref>
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia had a strong pro-communist bias, which "is apparent on almost every subject consulted".<ref>Allen Kent, Harold Lancour, Jay E. Daily, ''Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 25'' CRC Press, 1978, ISBN 0824720253, [http://books.google.com/books?id=l8mIFaw53JUC&pg=PA171&dq=%22Great+Soviet+Encyclopedia%22+bias&as_brr=3&ei=QSksSrrINo-6ygTojfz7Cw&hl=pl Google Print, p.171]</ref><ref>Bill Katz, William A. Katz, Ruth A. Fraley, ''Evaluation of reference services'', Haworth Press, 1984, ISBN 0866563776, [http://books.google.com/books?id=2C4-Pq8N8MMC&pg=PA308&dq=%22Great+Soviet+Encyclopedia%22+bias&as_brr=3&ei=QSksSrrINo-6ygTojfz7Cw&hl=pl Google Print, p.308]</ref>

Revision as of 03:53, 9 June 2009

Title page of the 3rd ed. (in Russian), 1st vol.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (Russian: Большая советская энциклопедия, or БСЭ; transliterated Bolshaya sovetskaya entsiklopediya) is one of the largest and most comprehensive encyclopedias in Russian, issued by the state.

Editions

There were three editions. The first edition of 65 volumes (65,000 entries, plus a supplementary volume about the Soviet Union) was published during 1926–1947, the chief editor being Otto Schmidt (until 1941). The second edition of 50 volumes (100,000 entries, plus a supplementary volume) was published in 1950–1958; chief editors: Sergei Vavilov (until 1951) and Boris Vvedensky (until 1969); two index volumes to this edition were published in 1960. The third edition of 1969–1978 contains 30 volumes (100,000 entries, plus an index volume issued in 1981. Volume 24 is in two books, one of them being a full-sized book about the USSR) – all with about 21 million words (Kister 365), and the chief editor being Alexander Prokhorov (since 1969).

From 1957–1990 each year the Yearbook of the Great Soviet Encyclopedia was released, with up-to-date articles about the Soviet Union and all countries of the world.

The first online edition, an exact replica of text and graphics of the third (so-called Red) edition, was published by Rubricon.com in 2000.

Editors

Editors and contributors to the GSE included a number of leading Soviet scientists and politicians: Viktor Ambartsumian, Nikolai Baibakov, Mykola Bazhan, Maia Berzina, Nikolay Bogolyubov, Andrei Bubnov, Nikolai Bukharin, Nikolai Burdenko, Mikhail Frunze, Victor Glushkov, Igor Grabar, Veniamin Kagan, Ivan Knunyants, Andrei Kolmogorov, Valerian Kuybyshev, Anatoly Lunacharsky, Vladimir Obruchev, Aleksandr Oparin, Yuri Prokhorov, Karl Radek, Nikolai Semashko, and Kliment Voroshilov.

Translations

English

The third edition was translated and published into English in 31 volumes between 1974 and 1983 by Macmillan Publishers. Each volume was translated separately, requiring use of the index found at the front of each volume to locate specific items; knowledge of Russian can be helpful to find the right volume the first time. Not all entries were translated into English; these are indicated in the index. Overall, some entries indicate an anti-American bias,[citation needed] reflecting the international tensions and ideological conflict between the United States and the USSR at the time.

Greek

The third edition has also been translated and published into Greek in 34 volumes between 1977 and 1983. All articles that were related to Greece or Greek history, culture and society were expanded and hundreds of new ones were written especially for the Greek edition. Thus the encyclopaedia contains, for example, both the Russian entry on Greece as well as a much larger one prepared by Greek contributors.

Finally, a supplementary volume covering the 1980s was published in 1989. It contains translated and original Greek articles which, sometimes, do not exist in the 34-volume set.

Other Soviet Encyclopedias

Original title Transliteration (if applicable) English title Volumes Dates
Українська радянська енциклопедія Ukraïns'ka Radyans'ka Enstiklopediya Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia 17 1959-1965
Беларуская савецкая энцыклапедыя Belaruskaya Savietskaya Entsyklapedyya Byelorussian Soviet Encyclopedia 12 1969-1975
Ўзбек совет энциклопедияси Uzbek Soviet Entsiklopediyasi Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia 14 1971-1980
Қазақ кеңес энциклопедиясы Qazaq Keñes Encïklopedïyası Kazakh Soviet Encyclopedia 10 1972-1978
ქართული საბჭოთა ენციკლოპედია kartuli sabch'ota encik'lop'edia Georgian Soviet Encyclopedia 12 1975-1987
Азәрбајҹан Совет Енсиклопедијасы Azerbajchan Soviet Ensiklopedijasy Azerbaijani Soviet Encyclopedia 10 1976-1987
Lietuviškoji tarybinė enciklopedija - Lithuanian Soviet Encyclopedia 10 1976-1985
Енчиклопедия советикэ молдовеняскэ Enciclopedia Sovietică Moldovenească Moldavian Soviet Encyclopedia 8 1970-1981
Latvijas padomju enciklopēdija - Latvian Soviet Encyclopedia 11 1981-1988
Кыргыз Совет Энциклопедиясы Kyrgyz Soviet Entsiklopediyasy Kyrgyz Soviet Encyclopedia 6 1976-1980
Энциклопедияи советии тоҷик Entsiklopediyai Sovietii Tochik Tajik Soviet Encyclopedia 8 1978-1988
Հայկական սովետական հանրագիտարան Haykakan sovetakan hanragitaran Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia 13 1974-1987
Түркмен совет энциклопедиясы Türkmen Soviet Entsiklopediyasy Turkmen Soviet Encyclopedia 10 1974-1989
Eesti Nõukogude entsüklopeedia - Estonian Soviet Encyclopedia 8 1968-1976

Reliability of information

The entire content of Encyclopedia was heavily controlled by the Soviet censorship agency Glavlit for consistency with the Communist Party line. However, the Encyclopedia did not even mention the existence of Glavlit. Instead, it asserted:
 

The October Revolution put an end to both tsarist and bourgeois censorship[1]

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia had a strong pro-communist bias, which "is apparent on almost every subject consulted".[2][3]

Damnatio memoriae

Following the arrest and punishment of Lavrentiy Beria, the notorious head of the NKVD, in 1953 the encyclopedia — ostensibly in response to overwhelming public demand — mailed subscribers to the second edition a letter from the editor[4] instructing them to cut out and destroy the three-page article on Beria and paste in its place enclosed replacement pages expanding the adjacent articles on F. W. Bergholz (an eighteenth-century courtier), the Bering Sea, and Bishop Berkeley.[5] By April of 1954, the Library of the University of California had received this “replacement.”[6]

This was not the only case of political influence. Encyclopedia subscribes received missives to replace articles in the fashion of the Beria article frequently.[7] Content of others changed significantly, to reflect not the scientific knowledge but the current party line. An article affected in such a fashion was the one on Bukharin, whose evolution of descriptions went through several versions.[8]

Bibliography

  • Great Soviet encyclopedia, ed. A. M. Prokhorov (New York: Macmillan, London: Collier Macmillan, 1974–1983) 31 volumes, three volumes of indexes. Translation of third Russian edition of Bol'shaya sovetskaya entsiklopediya
  • Kister, Kenneth. Kister's Best Encyclopedias. 2nd ed. (1994)

See also

References

  1. ^ Pipes, Richard (1995), Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime, New York: Vintage Books, Random House Inc., ISBN 0-394-50242-6, page 297.
  2. ^ Allen Kent, Harold Lancour, Jay E. Daily, Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 25 CRC Press, 1978, ISBN 0824720253, Google Print, p.171
  3. ^ Bill Katz, William A. Katz, Ruth A. Fraley, Evaluation of reference services, Haworth Press, 1984, ISBN 0866563776, Google Print, p.308
  4. ^ Sophie Lambroschini, “Russia: Putin-Decreed ‘Great Russian’ Encyclopedia Debuts At Moscow Book Fair,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  5. ^ O. Lawrence Burnette Jr. and William Converse Haygood (Eds.), A Soviet View of the American past: An Annotated Translation of the Section on American History in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (Chicago: Scott, Foresman, 1964), p. 7.
  6. ^ He who destroys a good Book, kills reason it self:an exhibition of books which have survived Fire, the Sword and the Censors” University of Kansas Library 1955
  7. ^ John T. Jost, Aaron C., Social and Psychological Bases of Ideology and System Justification, Oxford University Press US, 2009, ISBN 0195320913, Google Print, p.465
  8. ^ Ludwik Kowalski, Discriptions of Bucharin in Great Soviet Encyclopedia