Magnitogorsk: Time, Forward

1028 Words3 Pages

During the post World War I era, many European countries were rebuilding, and the Soviet Union saw this as a chance to catch up. The Soviet Union, under Joseph Stalin’s rule, implemented the five-year plan as strategy for rapid industrialization (Hunt, 846). A great example of Stalin’s five-year plan was the construction of Magnitogorsk, a city based around a massive factory. This construction flawlessly captured Stalin’s goals for progression, efficiency, and conquering nature (back cover). The novel Time, Forward! took place in 1932 and described, in detail, the construction of Magnitogorsk. This novel hinted at the spirit of the times. In the novel, one of the engineers, Margulies, decided to push concrete pouring to its limits. His rival, assistant chief of construction, Nalbandov wanted the downfall of Margulies, and decided to write him up. Nalbandov thought of two charges. The first was that Margulies recklessly sacrificed the quality of the cement for more cement production; this recklessness went against the current scientific understanding of concrete, and the quality would not suffice. The second would show Margulies going against Soviet policies of increasing tempos, as he did not allow the next shift to pour an even larger amount of concrete (314). The second charge was less scientific, but it was more in the spirit of the times because those who hindered progress should be punished. One may wonder, what was the spirit of the times? When Joseph Stalin came into power, he instilled in the public sphere that the Soviet Union would no longer accept backwardness (Hunt, 846). The spirit of the times was all about progress, efficiency, and conquering nature; this spirit is what pushed the Soviet Union away form their backw... ... middle of paper ... ...amble against nature paid off that winter, and the dam was completed; technique conquered nature (183). Politically Margulies’s idea once again embodied the spirit of the times, he conquered nature for the benefit of the Soviet Union; Stalin would be proud of Margulies’s innovation. Given these points, the spirit of the times was all about progress, efficiency, and conquering nature. The Soviet Union, led by Joseph Stalin, wanted to rid itself of backwardness and did that in many ways. The city of Magnitogorsk embodied the spirit in ways including: the rapid creation of the city, record breaking production of cement within the city, creating new time efficient cement creation processes, and conquering nature in the dead of winter. This city was a success for Stalin because it embodied the spirit of the times to create a more efficient and progressive Soviet Union.

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