(1932-33 Transport) (with) (1932-33 Culture)

Left Side (1932-33 Transport) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: According to the five-year plan, the production of industrial and agricultural products will increase. A lot will need to be transported. In the five-year plan, we will build 2 automobile plants. We will lay 25 thousand kilomete...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laptev, A.M.
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: GIZ (State Publishing House) 1930
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~361680~90129134
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Description
Summary:Left Side (1932-33 Transport) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: According to the five-year plan, the production of industrial and agricultural products will increase. A lot will need to be transported. In the five-year plan, we will build 2 automobile plants. We will lay 25 thousand kilometers of new railways and launch new steam engines and wagons on them. To the farthest places of the Union, where there have never been railways, steam engines will go. We will build the five-year plan with the people in those places where we work. Right Side (1932-33 Culture) Title: [No specific title provided] Text: In five years, we will build many new schools and universities. The country will receive tens of thousands of teachers, agronomists, and engineers. Literacy will increase almost twofold: out of every thousand people, there will be 820 literate. Many books will be published. New clubs, theaters, and cinemas will open. Books will be published in four years as much as in the previous 200 years. Every person will have a book. Among them will be the book edited by Kolkhoznik Palets. "A fine copy of this rare complex Constructivist panorama produced by A.M. Laptev, a gifted Soviet avant-garde graphic artist and graduate of VKhUTEMAS-VEKhUTEIN. Created to promote the vast industrial progress of Stalin's Five Year Plan through maps, charts, "Isotypes" and flaps that fold out to form an engaging visual essay on the then current economic state of the USSR. The panorama can be read in two directions: "The reader finds three maps: one for the electrification of the country, the second for the construction of factories, and the last for the collectivization of farms. Through these maps, young readers become familiar with a synchronic view of the Five-Year Plan . Turning the book over and starting from the back cover, the reader is presented with targets for ten aspects of Soviet industry: electricity, factory construction, iron, coal, oil, the chemical industry, bread production, forestry, transportation, and culture. ...