Table of contents : Cover Half Title Series Information Title Page Copyright Page Table of contents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction: How should we write the history of communist Bulgaria? The problem of distance: from close up and far away Why the silence about communism? Macrohistory; or, history from the “bottom up” The trajectory of the regime: three provisionally differentiated periods The regime and society in an interdisciplinary perspective The People’s Republic of Bulgaria and the Republic of Bulgaria: continuity or a break? Notes Historical background: The Communist Party’s path to power The building of the modern Bulgarian state The upswing of the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century Bulgaria’s participation in wars from 1912 to 1918 and the subsequent catastrophe The intense struggles of the interwar period The initial phase of the war and Bulgarian neutrality (1939–1941) Bulgaria in the orbit of the Third Reich (1941–1944) Notes Part I The times of high Stalinism 1 Bulgaria in the shadow of Stalin Establishment of the Fatherland Front government in Bulgaria The Moscow Truce and Bulgaria’s participation in the final stage of World War II Conflicts within the Fatherland Front and the formation of a legal opposition to the regime The intensification of social-political struggles within the country Signing the peace treaty with Bulgaria Convening a Grand National Assembly and the liquidation of the opposition Notes 2 Georgi Dimitrov and “the people’s democracy” Georgi Dimitrov and his diary Dimitrov and Stalin On the nature of “the people’s democracy” Notes 3 Bulgaria in the years of classical Stalinism The second major wave of repression Vâlko Chervenkov: the new charismatic leader Notes 4 Building the communist economy in Bulgaria The postwar economic crisis and the beginning of deep transformations within the Bulgarian economy (1944–1947) The economic dimensions of Bulgarian participation in the war The scope of the economic and financial crisis Changes in the management and structure of the Bulgarian economy The sovietization of the Bulgarian economy (1948–1953) The beginning of industrialization in Bulgaria The roots of Bulgaria’s economic and financial dependence on the USSR Disbalances in the communist economy Ideas for Bulgaria’s economic development as a weapon in power struggles (1953–1956) Notes 5 The Bulgarian village under communism: Collectivization, social change, and adaptation At the crossroads between private and collective agriculture Tools for imposing the Soviet kolkhoz model The first stage of mass collectivization The TKZSs and social change in the Bulgarian village The villagers’ resistance The temporary lull The final push toward mass collectivization The villagers’ strategies for adaptation Notes 6 The goryani: Armed resistance against communist repression Notes 7 The sovietization of Bulgaria: A basic resource for the new communist authorities Objective factors in the sovietization of Bulgaria Subjective factors in sovietization Entanglement in the totalitarian web Notes 8 State Security within the structure of the communist state: Ruling through violence Building State Security Political repression Organizational principles Intelligence departments Domestic security and political police Notes 9 Education and culture within the system of the communist state The new government’s educational policy The seizure and centralization of cultural institutes and independent organizations of intellectuals Censorship institutions The imposition of socialist realism in the literature and culture of communist Bulgaria Notes 10 Communist Bulgaria’s foreign policy and the Cold War The idea of a south Slavic federation and its failure The signing of the peace treaty and the official establishment of Bulgaria’s status as a Soviet satellite Bulgaria and international relations within the borders of the Eastern Bloc Bulgaria’s relations with the United States and other Western countries during the Cold War Bulgaria and bloc-internal crises Bulgaria and the Third World Notes Part II From sheepish de-Stalinization toward the consolidation of the regime and its penetration into everyday life 11 After Stalin: Political processes within “real socialism” A timid thaw in Bulgarian society The 1956 April Plenum of the Central Committee of the BCP and its consequences Todor Zhivkov’s seizure of absolute power Factional struggles and conspiracies within the BCP during the 1960s and the early 1970s The Zhivkov Constitution of 1971 and the leader’s new cult of personality Old foreign policy with a new voice Bulgaria and the end of the Cold War Notes 12 The course toward accelerated economic development and reform of the economic model In search of new economic priorities Communist Bulgaria’s first debt crisis (1960–1964) The first timid attempts at reforming the economic model (1963–1968) Substitutes for reform (1968–1976) The concentration of production Attempts at a structural transformation of the economy The scientific-technical revolution The second foreign-debt crisis (1973–1978) “The new economic mechanism” (1979–1980) Economic or political restructuring: Zhivkov with/versus Gorbachev Notes 13 Sovietization in the shadow of Khrushchev and the Brezhnev Doctrine Notes 14 In search of a communist model of consumer society Reasons for consensus instead of violence The paths to constructing a feigned consensus Disintegration of the feigned consensus Notes 15 Processes within society: The division of the public and private spheres Notes 16 The ghosts of national communism and pressure on Muslim communities Pressure and survival during the 1960s and early 1970s “The Revival Process” from the mid-1970s through the 1980s Notes 17 The church on the periphery of society Christian churches: a struggle to survive under Stalinism Elevation of the international status of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church The isolation of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church under Patriarch Kiril (1953–1971) and Patriarch Maxim The Bulgarian Orthodox Church’s international and ecumenical activities Notes 18 Processes within the culture of “real socialism” Lyudmila Zhivkova and the new cultural policy: unified long-term cultural programs The historicization of culture and the transformation of classical ideological postulates Crisis and mimicry in socialist realism: discursive tension The alternatives: vacillation and acknowledgment From the invisible turn during the 1970s and 1980s to the slow advance of alternatives Notes Part III The collapse and peaceful withdrawal of communism in Bulgaria 19 The deepening crises and the paralyzation of the regime Reform fever to the bitter end: from the July Conception to Decree 56 The foreign-debt.trap The collapse of the “Revival Process” and the intensification of Bulgaria’s international isolation Perestroika-related processes in late-communist culture Socialist realism as an abandoned fortress Notes 20 The limits of the communist model and an evaluation of the regime’s social policy A social policy “in service of the people” Sources and uses of nostalgia Justice and solidarity in the communist état-providence Social benefits and the social corruption of the masses Social rights and their internal erosion: an element of communist Bulgaria’s final crisis Notes 21 Gorbachev’s perestroika and its influence on processes in Bulgaria Gorbachev’s perestroika and Zhivkov’s perestruvka The “grand era of the intelligentsia” and the late Bulgarian dissident movement The November 10 coup and Todor Zhivkov’s removal from.power Notes 22 The beginning of the Great Transition Notes Timeline of the People’s Republic of Bulgaria Leading historical figures from the period Bibliography Index