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In Memoriam of a Stakhanovite

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Vladimir Vysotsky

ПАМЯТИ СТАХАНОВЦА
ВЛАДИМИР ВЫСОЦКИЙ

 Сидели пили вразнобой
 "Мадеру", "Cтарку", "Зверобой" -
 и вдруг нас всех зовут в забой, до одного:
 у нас - стахановец, гагановец,
 загладовец, - и надо ведь,
 чтоб завалило именно его.

 Он - в прошлом младший офицер,
 его нам ставили в пример,
 он был, как юный пионер, всегда готов,
 и вот он прямо с корабля
 пришел стране давать угля,
 а вот сегодня наломал, как видно, дров.

 Спустились в штрек, и бывший зек -
 большого риска человек -
 сказал: "Беда для нас для всех, для всех одна:
 вот раскопаем - он опять
 начнет три нормы выполнять,
 начнет стране угля давать - и нам хана.

 Так что, вы, братцы, - не стараться,
 а поработаем с прохладцей -
 один за всех и все за одного".

 ...Служил он в Таллине при Сталине -
 теперь лежит заваленный, -
 нам жаль по-человечески его...

Partial translation:

We sat and drunk all kinds of spirits, suddenly all of us are called to the mine face: we had a stakhanovite, and it so happened that just he was heaped under. <...> We went down the drift, and our foreman, former zeka a man of great risk, told us: "We dig him out, he would continue producing triple quotas, and all of us are in a really big trouble. So, we better not try too hard, let us work 'All for One and One for All'. He served to Stalin in Tallinn, now he is heaped, we all feel humanly sorry for him.

Mikkalai 07:51, 21 Oct 2004 (UTC)

The article puts a rather positive spin on the Stakhanovites

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I've always heard it as a term of derision. The way it was presented to me is that the Stakhanovites would set records in production which management then expected all of the other workers to match (and who was the wag who said that under capitalism man exploits man, but under communism its the other way around?). This emphasis on increased quotas, and penalties for failing them, became another one of the mechanisms of Soviet era oppression and control (<sarcasm>Thank God there aren't any companies like that in America!</sarcasm> of the working classes.


Whjamisonjr 04:10, 1 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

The reason it was presented that way to you is because you lived in the West, and the USSR was the West's mortal enemy. You really think they would tell you great things about Soviet life? For what purpose would they do this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.221.133.190 (talk) 07:00, 11 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

References to Stakhanov appear in several of Solzhenitsyn’s works and not in a positive way. This is actually the subject of academic research. /[1] --Mccainre (talk) 23:07, 7 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ https://nickfalkner.com/tag/stakhanovite-movement/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)


This article does indeed seem to reflect a pro-Stakhanovism bias from the absence of any critical information. Regarding the unsigned comment above that criticism of Stakhanovism is from people who "lived in the West", this person seemed unaware of the fact there are Russian Marxist critics of Stakhanovism whose work can not be called a pro-West bias in any way, since they attack the Stakhanov movement precisely for its capitalistic, individualistic and elitist aspects. For example, Stakhanovism contributed to rising social inequality during the 1930s by encouraging individualistic competition and creating an elite caste of super-workers who could receive high salaries and privileges comparable to the nomenklatura. Also, many accounts of Stakhanovite exploits are easily proven to be fake, many Stakhanovites were known to have scammed the government with fake records, and the Stakhanov movement itself was overall a giant bureaucratic farce which wasted national resources and may have caused an overall net reduction in productivity. A section detailing criticisms of the movement needs to be added. Famisht (talk) 16:56, 21 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

The natural place for it would be Stakhanovite movement § Opposition and termination. That section did previously have a paragraph that briefly mentioned that it was criticised within the Soviet Union as a Stalinist propaganda manoeuvre but this was cut in June, 2023, because no references had been provided for it. However, the section on critical coverage in the Soviet newspaper, Komosolskaya Pravda, remains (although the reference is incomplete).
If you know of and have access to appropriate sources, feel free to add new material to that section to provide more balanced coverage. A brief summary of the new material can then be added to the lead section to reflect the expansion of the article.
If it helps, the cut material was: During the era of de-Stalinization, which sought to undo much of what was done during Stalin's régime, the Stakhanovite movement was declared a Stalinist propaganda maneuver; workers would receive the best equipment and most favorable conditions so that the best results could be achieved. After Stalin's death in March 1953 'brigades of socialist labor' replaced 'Stakhanovism'.Scyrme (talk) 17:17, 21 August 2023 (UTC)Reply

Great patriotic war

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It seems that this article has a soviet bias. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.245.164.60 (talk) 04:53, 29 December 2006 (UTC).Reply

Father of the Modern Sales Contest

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Stakhanovism sounds the the beginning of the modern sales contest. Managers find someone to set an outrageously high target and then admonish everyone to aspire to it. As days dwindle and reality begins to rear its ugly head, those who doubted all along are silenced through terrorism or termination. As the final days arrive, salesmen reach ahead to push product into other's inventory and convert future sales into the sales contest period, thereby increasing production through gimmicktry and at the expense of future productivity. At the close of the contest, mangement is not obliged to reward any increased productivity, because the target was not reached, but often does so when workers laud bosses for their fairness and justice. Then the organization purges itself of anyone who was smart enough to see how it would conclude, and often blames them for ruining the sales effort with their negative attitudes.

In fiction

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I removed the reference to The Working Class Goes to Heaven, included by @Scottandrewhutchins:, because I am sure that a film whose action occurs in Italy in the 60s/70s (I saw that movie, many years ago...) could have nothing to do with the Stakhanovite movement. MiguelMadeira (talk) 11:44, 15 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Some sources

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Here are some sources we should use in discussing the creation of the Stakhanovite legend:

We also need a more precise reference to the Komsomolskaya Pravda article. --Macrakis (talk) 21:20, 26 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Parentheticals: normally NOT needed in the lede sentence

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This replaces---w/o reverting---a recent edit; & returns the text to the immediately previous version; & offers the following talk for discussion> (1) the text in-question is not a "definition" of the article title, as mentioned. Instead, it is a parenthetical; specifically, a pronunciation-parenthetical---in this case, a parenthetical for pronouncing the article title in another language, (Russian). (All good, except---it doesn't belong it the lede sentence.)

(2) Per WP guidance, most pronunciation-parentheticals are not of relevance to be placed immediately following the article title name; or to be inserted anywhere into the first/lede sentence. This parenthetical, which pronounces the article title in another language---is not "directly relevant" to advancing the subject matter of the article, (see (4) below). ((Test: if this parenthetical is completely omitted, treatment of the subject matter of this article is not diminished)). Therefore, it should not be inserted anywhere in the first sentence of the article page. ///\\\ [NB: all emphases are mine, eg, italics, "quote marks", bolds.]

(3) Pls review the WP guidance re this question at Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation---which explains> "Do not include pronunciation guides for non-English translations of the article title in the text of the lead sentence, as this clutters the lead sentence and impairs readability".

(4) Also, pls see Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section § Pronunciation---which explains> "Pronunciation should be indicated sparingly, as parenthetical information disturbs the normal flow of the text and introduces clutter. In the article text, it should be indicated only where it is directly relevant to the subject matter, such as describing a word's etymology or explaining a pun".

(5) Actually, the first need is: WP must provide readability for the lay reader---ie., readability not for the WP editor---but, readability for the reader; for the WP lay reader.

Indeed, there is a real need here---a priority need: ..to not clutter the lede sentence of the lede section with tangential information that is extraneous to "readability for the lay reader".

So,---other than for very limited exception(s), per WP guidance---parentheticals should not be placed in the first/lede sentence. .

(6) ...know that all such (parentheticals) may be placed in the 2nd sentence---for covenience of access & consulting; or for convenience of access & ignoring---by all readers.

I yield to further discussion.@XCBRO172: Thank you, Regards,Jbeans (talk) 02:51, 29 November 2024 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for your well cited arguments (although the WP sections cited are switched, but that doesn't matter). I was not aware of these general guidelines before about parentheticals (I was even unaware they were called such, as you pointed out).
I would like to indicate however that in a closer reading of the citations and looking through the history, the Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section § Pronunciation's equivilant of "Pronunciation should be indicated sparingly, as parenthetical information disturbs the normal flow of the text and introduces clutter. In the article text, it should be indicated only where it is directly relevant to the subject matter, such as describing a word's etymology or explaining a pun", explained in a past revision [1] that this applied only to pronunciations shortly following the pronunciation of others, although this would later be changed to all of the pronunciations. I now believe, looking through other articles that footnotes for pronunciation may be a good solution, as examples cited by Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation like Genghis Khan, Venezuela or Nikita Khrushchev use footnotes, a solution pointed out by Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section § Pronunciation, which would strike the middle ground of decluttering, while also directly following the target word. (This although some like Ralph Fiennes still have a bare pronunciation)
Still, this isn't a pronunciation (which uses Template:IPA), but rather a translation into the original language (which uses Template:Langx, as in this article), however even so, these still appear to be packed into footnotes along with the pronunciation anyways.
TLDR: We both have had misunderstandings of both terminology and guidelines, but the solution appears to use footnotes. Yes I am a nerd -XCBRO172 (How could you tell?) 23:11, 29 November 2024 (UTC)Reply