This paper examines the challenges of studying everyday life in the USSR during the mid-twentieth century. Drawing on archival materials and published collections of citizens' letters in periodicals, it demonstrates that social processes in the Soviet Union were uneven and varied significantly across regions. The lived reality of provincial towns often diverged from official ideological narratives of large metropolitan centers. A key challenge for historians is identifying sources that accurately reflect this complex social mosaic. This study emphasizes the importance of a comparative analysis between citizens’ letters and official documents from government offices. The author argues that citizens’ appeals provide rich, detailed insights into everyday life, revealing regional disparities in the availability of goods and social services such as running water, gas and electricity. By juxtaposing these personal accounts with administrative records from executive offices, the paper shows that researchers can regard citizens’ letters as reliable factual sources. This approach highlights the value of personal correspondence in reconstructing the nuanced realities of Soviet society beyond official ideology.
O. D. Popova (Wed,) studied this question.
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