This 1922 publication asks the following questions regarding the nature
of Soviet socialisation: how different are Soviet moral values from our
own; how do their processes of socialisation differ from those we know
in the West; could we learn from the Russian educational system; or are
Soviet children simply indoctrinated with the beliefs of their political
leaders? Felicity O'Dell analyses the moral content of the stories read
by Russian primary school children and asks what values are taught and
how they reflect ideology. She also looks at popular children's
magazines and the way writers have portrayed the world for children in
the USSR. The author asks how successfully the educational process
instils the values of Soviet socialism. She documents how closely
children's literature mirrors the development of Russian society, and
draws conclusions relevant not just to the nature of Soviet society but
also to the Western method of raising children.