쿨라크 (Korean Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "쿨라크" in Korean language version.

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anl.az

archive.org

books.google.com

google.it

  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila (2000). 〈The Party Is Always Right〉. 《Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s》 paperback판. 옥스퍼드: 옥스퍼드 대학교 출판부. 22쪽. ISBN 9780195050011. The Soviet regime was adept at creating its own enemies, whom it then suspected of conspiracy against the state. It did so first by declaring that all members of certain social classes and estates – primarily former nobles, members of the bourgeoisie, priests, and kulaks – were by definition 'class enemies,' resentful of their loss of privilege and likely to engage in counterrevolutionary conspiracy to recover them. The next step, taken at the end of the 1920s, was the 'liquidation as a class' of certain categories of class enemies, notably kulaks and, to a lesser extent, Nepmen and priests. This meant that the victims were expropriated, deprived of the possibility of continuing their previous way of earning a living, and often arrested and exiled. 

leksika.com.ua

marxists.org

nytimes.com

archive.nytimes.com

  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila (2000). 〈The Party Is Always Right〉. 《Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s》 paperback판. 옥스퍼드: 옥스퍼드 대학교 출판부. 22쪽. ISBN 9780195050011. The Soviet regime was adept at creating its own enemies, whom it then suspected of conspiracy against the state. It did so first by declaring that all members of certain social classes and estates – primarily former nobles, members of the bourgeoisie, priests, and kulaks – were by definition 'class enemies,' resentful of their loss of privilege and likely to engage in counterrevolutionary conspiracy to recover them. The next step, taken at the end of the 1920s, was the 'liquidation as a class' of certain categories of class enemies, notably kulaks and, to a lesser extent, Nepmen and priests. This meant that the victims were expropriated, deprived of the possibility of continuing their previous way of earning a living, and often arrested and exiled. 

pdx.edu

web.pdx.edu