@misc{Talarek_Adrian_Propagandowe, author={Talarek, Adrian}, howpublished={online}, publisher={Zielona Góra: Oficyna Wydawnicza Uniwersytetu Zielonogórskiego}, language={pol}, abstract={After World War II, by virtue of arrangements made in Yalta and then in Potsdam, Poland found itself in the Soviet sphere of influence. Changes that took place in Poland after the Second World War also required a shift in state power. The period from 1945 to 1956 - the Stalinist period - can be described as the first phase of People`s Poland, although the name of the state was only changed to the Polish People`s Republic in 1952, after the adoption of the Polish People`s Republic constitution.}, abstract={Polish society was subject to Soviet indoctrination and the state practiced a model of Soviet propaganda. Various state, political, and local holidays in line with what the authorities imposed were held in all Polish cities and regions. Of these, the most well-known holidays are 1 May and 22 July. The propaganda system in the Lower Silesia and Częstochowa regions was the same as in the rest of the Polish state.}, abstract={The authorities wanted to instill in people completely new authorities and a new way of life in every possible way, making them experience free time and holidays in a manner consistent with the canon of Soviet propaganda - people were to work, perform highly in their workplaces, and, on a free day, to rest and participate in the holidays, whose extensive catalog was decreed by the authorities.}, abstract={During the Stalinist period, everything was subordinated to the cult of the individual, and a man deprived of his free conscience was to do everything that was commanded him. This situation is well expressed by the realities of propaganda, analysed in the presented article in the dimension of a local cultural environment.}, type={artykuł}, title={Propagandowe wykorzystanie świąt i rocznic w okresie stalinowskim (1945-1956) na przykładzie regionu dolnośląskiego i częstochowskiego = Propaganda use of holidays and anniversaries in the Stalinist period (1945-1956) on the example of the lower Silesia and Częstochowa regions}, keywords={propaganda, obchody, 1 Maja, 22 Lipca, pochód, dolnośląskie, Częstochowa (region), feast, 1 May, 22 July, parade, Lower Silesia, Częstochowa area}, }