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The Manhoff Archives: Color photos of Stalin-era USSR taken by a US diplomat

162 pointsby Cider9986last Sunday at 12:59 AM53 commentsview on HN

Comments

0xDEAFBEADtoday at 4:46 PM

"According to Smith, after Manhoff’s wife died he was asked to check the home of a former official for valuable memorabilia."

I wonder how much valuable memorabilia is just getting thrown away because no one thought to check for it.

Here's your nudge to ask your older relatives about their memorabilia, and record conversations with them while they are still alive.

If you want to put the info online somewhere to increase the chance that it's useful to someone someday, you could try a free genealogy website like familysearch.org or wikitree.com

infectotoday at 2:00 PM

Lots of contention here around the narrative. The original link should be removed and replaced with the original source that has what’s seems to be accurate and different narratives for the pictures. The linked site seems to simply steal what is a pretty nice coverage of the archive.

https://www.rferl.org/a/the-manhoff-archive/28359558.html

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dctoedttoday at 3:36 PM

More information about the origins of the collection and the photographer (a U.S. Army officer, assistant military attaché): https://manhoffarchive.org/narratives/intro

usrnmtoday at 1:28 PM

Interesting and sad to see the ratio of women to men doing hard manual work in these photos, even road repairs are done by women. It's mind boggling how devastating the war was for the country.

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aix1last Sunday at 4:24 AM

As someone who grew up in the Soviet Union (during a later period), I found it really interesting to look at this photographs.

One thing worth pointing out: Moscow was very different from the rest of the country. It had better housing and infrastructure, the shops were stocked far better than elsewhere in the country, it had more grandiose architecture and richer cultural life and so on.

In many is ways it was the country's showcase city.

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Jgoauhtoday at 1:19 PM

"It becomes evident that the parade was a carefully choreographed spectacle, designed to showcase the Soviet Union’s ideology and power to the world."

Ah yes, everyone known that in a TRUE democracy parades are spontaneously occurring events, self organizing to show the country's weaknesses and the population's biases.

Seriously tho, what does this mean, has anyone ever been to a parade and concluded it was neither coreographed, planned, or meant give a positive image ?

How do you determine people's enthusiasm is planned and orchestrated by looking at them ?

Are all parades proof the country is actually the torture Truman show or just the countries you're being payed to spy on ?

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adolphtoday at 1:20 PM

  It unveils the stark contrast between the carefully constructed façade 
  presented by the Soviet authorities and the harsh realities experienced by 
  ordinary citizens.
  
I guess without examples of the "carefully constructed façade" its difficult to understand if there is a contrast. To me, the photos just look like ordinary 1950s street scenes. Waiting at Walgreens the other day I spent the time examining the store's decorative antique photos; aside from differences in culture and subject area, so many details of vehicles, building construction, clothing styles are remarkably similar.
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obezyianlast Sunday at 10:39 AM

> store №20

> MEAT. FISH.

That's some Edward Bernays-level trickery right there. /s

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balalalalalalatoday at 1:19 PM

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bediger4000last Sunday at 1:55 AM

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serious_angeltoday at 12:38 PM

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