Startseite - Home

Katalog
Catalogue

eBooks

Verlage
Publishers

   Startseite :: Home
   Kontakt :: Contact
   über uns :: about us
   Datenschutz :: Privacy Policy
   Impressum
   Kundeninformation

Pravda Ukrainy Digital Archive (1938-2014)

Kontakt/Bestellung
Contact/Order

via E-Mail:
info@digento.de  Contact/Order: info@digento.de

Online

Inhalt :: Content

Online-Service mit Zugang zu sämtlichen Ausgaben der "Pravda Ukrainy" von 1938 bis 2014 im kombinierten Volltext- und Faksimileformat.
Die 1938 in Kiew gegründete Zeitung war eine russischsprachige sowjetisch-ukrainische Tageszeitung, die als offizielles Organ des Zentralkomitees der Kommunistischen Partei der Ukraine und des Obersten Sowjets der Ukrainischen Sozialistischen Sowjetrepublik der Verbreitung der Meinungen der Partei über Politik, Kultur, Wirtschaft und andere wichtige Themen diente. Die Zeitung, die bis zu ihrer vorübergehenden Schließung und Neugründung Anfang der 90er Jahre ihren kommunistischen ideologischen Prinzipien treu geblieben war, verpflichtete sich in der Folge demokratischen Prinzipien, einem unabhängigen Journalismus und einer uneingeschränkten Kritik an den politischen Verhältnissen.
Das Archiv der "Pravda Ukrainy" stellt eine wichtige Quelle für das Verständnis der ideologischen Veränderungen in der gesamten Ukraine von der Zeit der Sowjetisierung bis zur postsowjetischen Demokratisierung dar.

Pravda Ukrainy Digital Archive (1938-2014)

Verlag :: Publisher

East View Information Services

Preis :: Price

Preise auf Anfrage / Prices on request

Das Angebot richtet sich nicht an Verbraucher i. S. d. § 13 BGB und Letztverbraucher i. S. d. PAngV.

Bestellnummer bei digento :: digento order number

108333

Verlagsinformation :: Publisher's information

Established in 1938 in Kyiv, Pravda Ukrainy (originally Sovetskaia Ukraina) was a Russian-language Soviet Ukrainian daily and a newspaper of record, serving as the official organ of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine and Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR. As such the newspaper was the Ukrainian Communist Party's leading print media agent in the dissemination of the party's opinions about politics, culture, economics and other important issues.

During the tumultuous years of WWII, when much of Ukraine was either occupied by Nazi Germany or was an active theater of war, the newspaper would move editorial offices to such cities as Moscow and Saratov in Russia, and Voroshilovgrad and Kharkov in Eastern Ukraine. Due to its generous endowment by the Party the newspaper was able to attract journalistic talent from the region, which would help raise its profile among the reading public. Until its temporary closure in 1991, as a consequence of its defense of the 1991 Soviet coup leaders, the newspaper remained faithful to its Communist ideological principles. Following the failure of the coup the newspaper was restarted with a new editor and a new editorial policy in place.

By the early 1990s Pravda Ukrainy had become the complete opposite of the original newspaper, having jettisoned its previous ideological commitments, and instead embracing democratic principles, independent journalism, and an unrestrained criticism of the government—stances that drove its popularity and growing circulation. Due largely to financial struggles the newspaper ceased publication in 2014. The Pravda Ukrainy digital archive is an important resource in tracing and understanding the ideological changes taking place throughout Ukraine from the period of its Sovietization to its post-Soviet democratization.

Pravda Ukrainy Digital Archive

The Pravda Ukrainy digital archive contains all obtainable published issues of the newspaper from 1938 to 2014, totaling over 72,000 pages. The Pravda Ukrainy digital archive offers scholars the most comprehensive collection available for this title, and features full page-level digitization, complete original graphics, and searchable text, and is cross-searchable with numerous other East View digital resources.

Key Stats

  • Archive: 1938-2014
  • Language: Russian
  • Frequency: Daily
  • City: Kyiv
  • Format: PDF, page-based
  • Producer: East View Information Services
  • Platform: East View Universal Database

top  top