Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1982 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1982 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1983 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1983 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1984 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1984 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1985 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1985 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1985 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1985 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1985 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1985 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1985 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1985 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1986 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1986 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1986 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1986 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1987 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1987 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1988 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1988 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1988 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1988 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1989 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1989 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 33.5x26cm./13.1×10.2inch. Weight: 180gr./6.3oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 55 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1990 and made in the Romanian language. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Union”. Magazine devoted to social and political issues, science, literature, art and nature. Illustrated monthly publication in 21 languages.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1966 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1966. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1966 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1966. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1966 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1966. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1966 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1966. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1968 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1968. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1968 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1968. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1968 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1968. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 26×20.5cm./10.2x8inch. Weight: 126gr./4.4oz. Year: 1968 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1968. The title of the magazine reads:”Radio”. Monthly scientific and technical magazine dedicated to amateur radio, home electronics, audio / video, computers and telecommunications.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1975 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1975. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1976 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1976. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1977 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1977. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1977 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1977. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 6.00 euro Size: 24x17cm./9.4×6.6inch. Weight: 119gr./4.1oz. Year: 1977 Pages: 64 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1977. The title of the magazine reads:”Philately of the USSR”. Philately of the USSR is a Russian central philatelic magazine. It first appeared in july 1966 as the monthly bulletin Filateliya and was issued by the USSR Ministry of Communications. The magazine content includes the history and design of postage stamps, and other related themes.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1990. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1989. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1988. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1986 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1986. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1986 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.3, 1986. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1985 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1985. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1984. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1984. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1984. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1983 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1983. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1983 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1983. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 7.50 euro Size: 33x22cm./12.9×8.6inch. Weight: 230gr./8.1oz. Year: 1983 Pages: 48 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine made in the Soviet Union, No.6, 1983. The title of the magazine reads:”Soviet Photography”. Sovetskoe Foto was the sole specialist photography magazine in the Soviet Union. Founded by the writer and editor Mikhail Kotsov in April 1926, it was published in Moscow, Russia, from 1926 to 1991. Sovetskoe Foto’s editorials, letters, articles, advertisements for photographic chemicals and equipment, technical instruction and photoessays catered to a broad audience from professional photojournalists to amateur photographers, ‘worker–photographers and the camera clubs established post-WWII at almost every industrial plant and Palace of Culture throughout Soviet Union, and promoted the ‘worker photographer’ and the official photographic culture of the USSR, though it also carried examples of state-sanctioned international photography.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1990, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1990, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1990, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1990, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1990 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.1, 1990, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.5, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1989 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.2, 1989, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.12, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.11, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.10, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.8, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.7, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1988 Pages: 175 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.4, 1988, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.
Price: 5.00 euro Size: 19×13.5cm./7.4×5.3inch. Weight: 157gr./5.5oz. Year: 1984 Pages: 174 For sale at http://www.propagandaworld.org
Magazine Sputnik made in the Soviet Union, No.9, 1984, in the French language. Sputnik was a Soviet magazine published from 1967 until 1991 by the Soviet press agency Novosti in several languages, targeted at both Eastern Bloc countries and Western nations. It was intended to be a Soviet equivalent to Reader’s Digest, publishing news stories excerpted from the Soviet press in a similar size and paper. The magazine presented topics relating to politics, science, and culture as well as the society of the Soviet Union. Novosti wanted to promote a positive, modern image of the socialist development in the Soviet Union internationally. The magazine’s name reflects this objective as it refers to the first artificial earth satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. As a means of promoting socialism Soviet style, Sputnik disseminated socialist propaganda which many readers in the socialist countries dismissed as indoctrination. However, with changes in Soviet policies in the 1980s, the magazine became a source of sought-after information and discussion.