Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. This chapter examines two cases of scapegoating. The first, that of Ludwig Magyar, occurred in December 1934, following Kirov's murder but before the onset of mass repression; the second, that of Gevork Alikhanov, occurred in June 1937, just as the scale of repression was expanding dramatically.

  2. Gevork Sarkisovich Alikhanyan ( Armenian: Գևորգ Սարկիսովիչ Ալիխանյան) (1897–1938), also known in Russian as Georgy Alikhanov ( Russian: Георгий Алиханов ), was a Soviet Armenian politician and statesman. Alikhanyan is best known for being the founding First Secretary of the Communist Party of Armenia from 1920 to 1921.

  3. This article examines two cases of scapegoating—that of Ludwig Magyar in December 1934, and that of Gevork Alikhanov in June 1937—and applies theories of group identity and behavior to explore...

  4. 1 de ene. de 2011 · This article examines two cases of scapegoating—that of Ludwig Magyar in December 1934, and that of Gevork Alikhanov in June 1937—and applies theories of group identity and behavior to explore what motivated people to scapegoat their comrades, why the groups selected particular people for scapegoating, and what these incidences ...

    • William Chase
  5. 27 de sept. de 2011 · Her stepfather, Gevork Alikhanov, led the Communist Party of Armenia, and her mother, Ruth Bonner, a Siberian Jew, was also a Communist functionary. The family moved to Leningrad and then to Moscow. Under Stalin, Alikhanov was shot dead in 1938, and his wife was sent to a concentration camp.

  6. 25 de jun. de 1992 · Her file was begun before her arrest. It opens with a note (file page 1) dated November 4, 1937, “Former Comintern worker Alikhanov Gevork Sarkisovich was arrested by the Third Department GUGB as a member of a counterrevolutionary Trotskyite organization and as a Japanese spy.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ruth_BonnerRuth Bonner - Wikipedia

    In the 1930s, Bonner was a health official in the Communist Party committee of Moscow while her second husband, Gevork Alikhanyan, aka Georgy Alikhanov, was a director at the Comintern. As part of Stalin's mass purges in 1937, her husband was arrested on charges of espionage and sentenced to death.