Abstract

Homo sovieticus, a term employed to define certain traits of Soviet mentality as it had been shaped (in Lithuania) by 50 years of life in the USSR, was a subject that Lithuanian periodicals from 1988 to 1990 wrote about in the course of rejecting what was deemed alien to the nation as embodied in the socialist system, the state, its symbols, and its values. Existing homo sovieticus concepts denote the specific mentality of a person living under the Soviet system and/or a specific type of person formed by the system, with adaptability/conformism, passivity, avoidance of responsibility, and a sense of helplessness being the chief characteristics of this individual. Homo sovieticus is contrasted to, and used to satirize, the new Soviet man, demonstrating the true result of this propaganda project; and it is also an outcome of a person’s ability to conform. Homo sovieticus in Lithuanian publications is not a marginalized or demonized other, but rather an ailing self mutilated by the Soviet system as well as a future (national) self in need of healing and re-adjustment. The Soviet human being is dehumanized, with his/her value being reduced to the function (s)he performs and to the level of assimilation into the collective, a nameless mass. In the periodicals, homo sovieticus is being portrayed as a little cog in the machine, an intimidated grey mediocrity. Accustomed to unquestioningly obey the Soviet power, (s)he is afraid of and hungry for power at the same time, trying to satisfy this aspiration in basically everything (s)he does (everyone, from cashier or shoe mender, seems to willingly demonstrate any power they have). [...]

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