490:
paying royalties to its writers. DVU had to prioritize printing of school textbooks, with some 80 percent of its printed material being allocated to the education sector. For the 1924–1925 school year, DVU printed 105 school textbooks and 37 teacher instruction books. As of 1925, DVU also supplied five textbooks each for the
Yiddish, German, and Polish schools in the Ukrainian SSR, three for the Bulgarian schools, and two for the Moldavian schools. But the number of printed textbooks did not meet the demand, and schools outside of larger cities often had difficulties acquiring them.
24:
465:
350:
In 1922, the entity was renamed the State
Publishing House of Ukraine, in line with a reorganization occurring following decisions by the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine and the Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR. Publishing activities would have to
237:
was placed in charge of regulation of the publishing activities of scientific, cooperative, military, and literary organizations and associations, and it held the power to determine the number of publications and their circulation and was in charge of distributing paper for publishing activities.
489:
In 1925, the Soviet Union government began sending DVU economic support, allocating 10 percent of the all-Union budget for publishing activities to
Ukraine. The allocated resources were insufficient to meet its needs. In 1925, the financial crisis of DVU reached a point where the entity stopped
560:
The publishing activities in the
Ukrainian SSR were reorganized in 1930 amid a crackdown on nationalist tendencies. On August 21, 1930, by the decision of the Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR, DVU was replaced by the State Publishing Union of Ukraine (DVOU), which was formed
477:
During the first years after the 1922 reorganization, DVU struggled to stay afloat, as resources allocated by the Moscow Centre to DVU in terms of the printing press and paper resources were meager. In 1923 DVU published 2.2 million books in
Ukrainian language and 1.5 million school
372:. Several other publishing houses existed alongside DVU in the Ukrainian SSR; by 1922–1923, there were 49 publishing houses in the republic: 23 state-owned, ten belonging to cooperatives, four belonging to party organs, five to trade unions, and seven private.
375:
DVU printed many books in the
Ukrainian language, such as textbooks, series of classics, and translations of Western European literature. It also published some technical literature. DVU published almanacs and magazines such as
501:
literary works published by DVU would sell out in about half the usual press run of one and a half years for its Soviet counterparts. This was despite the higher prices of DVU literature compared to general Soviet literature.
454:
337:
was controlled by the
Presidium of the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee. In May 1921, the publishing house was placed under the management of the People's Commissariat for Education of the Ukrainian SSR.
439:
532:
which were published by DVU. By the late 1920s, DVU was the largest publisher in
Ukraine, and the second-largest publisher in the Soviet Union. In 1929–1930, DVU published an 18-volume translation of the
486:'s works, two dictionaries, a series of popular theatrical books and a peasants wall calendar. In the first 11 months of 1924, 67 percent of the works published by DVU were in the Ukrainian language.
280:
526:
298:
631:// Енциклопедія історії України: Т. 2: Г-Д / Редкол.: В. А. Смолій (голова) та ін. НАН України. Інститут історії України. - К.: В-во "Наукова думка", 2004. - 688 с.: іл..
396:
931:
926:
415:
167:
that existed from 1919 to 1930. During the 1920s, it was the most prominent literary publisher in the
Ukrainian SSR, publishing many books of different kinds in the
946:
226:
951:
941:
164:
383:
936:
509:
became the People's
Commissar for Education of the Ukrainian SSR, and after taking office, Skrypnyk pushed for a new round of '
364:, albeit the company had representative offices in other Ukrainian cities. Moreover, the company had representation offices in
297:
689:
357:). The erstwhile branches of the All-Ukrainian State Publishing House were converted into bookstores or trade offices.
493:
As DVU mainly printed textbooks, there was a large unmet demand for Ukrainian-language fictional prose literature.
513:'. With Skrypnyk as the Education Commissar several new literary and cultural publications were launched, such as
147:
548:), a body that organized deliveries of literature to trade unions, factory reading rooms, collective farms, and
658:
Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 31 - Toronto to The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
23:
410:
125:
305:
A decree issued by the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee on August 18, 1920, renamed the entity as
269:
resumed activities in December 1919, being managed under the All-Ukrainian Revolutionary Committee.
479:
521:
460:
578:
449:
430:
773:
Dorohyĭ Arkadii︠u︡: lystuvanni︠a︡ ta arkhivarii︠a︡ literaturnoho seredovyshcha Ukraïny, 1922-1945 rr
391:
378:
360:
From August 1922 onward, the headquarters of the State Publishing House of Ukraine was located in
483:
434:
168:
138:
275:
706:
906:
876:
854:
814:
657:
404:
837:
725:. Published for the Ukrainian National Association, University of Toronto Press, 1971. p. 459
515:
116:
628:
506:
496:
920:
538:
510:
471:
445:
262:
102:
891:
819:
789:
772:
751:
737:
721:
670:
608:
877:
Breaking the Tongue: Language, Education, and Power in Soviet Ukraine, 1923-1934
353:
229:
which ordered the merger of all soviet publishing houses into a single entity.
369:
247:
544:
DVU literature was distributed by the Ukrainian Book Distribution Center (
261:
became defunct as Ukraine came under the control of the forces of General
755:. Kharkivsʹkyĭ nat͡sionalʹnyĭ universytet im. V.N. Karazina, 2004. p. 154
571:
361:
251:
243:
95:
820:
Social Change and National Consciousness in Twentieth Century Ukraine
365:
609:Документы по истории и культуре евреев в архивах Киева: путеводитель
351:
conform to self-financing and accountability of allocated capital (
549:
296:
222:
91:
707:
The Oxford Critical and Cultural History of Modernist Magazines
478:
primers. Furthermore, in 1923, DVU published a new edition of
143:Державне видавництво України, abbreviated 'Держвидав' or 'ДВУ'
738:История Российской книжной палаты: вспомогательные указатели
892:
The New Generation and Artistic Modernism in the Ukraine
121:Государственное издательство Украины or Госиздат Украины
152:
838:
Anti-Imperial Choice: The Making of the Ukrainian Jew
194:
130:
904:
Christopher Rundle, Anne Lange, Daniele Monticelli.
792:. Вид-во політичної літератури Украіни, 1974. p. 54
86:
78:
63:
48:
40:
30:
710:. Oxford University Press, 2009. pp. 1245, 1358
482:'s works, a Ukrainian-language translation of
561:through the merger of ten publishing houses.
429:. Ukrainian writers working for DVU included
8:
494:
16:
880:. University of Toronto Press, 2014. p. 120
301:All-Ukrainian State Publishing House symbol
233:was given monopoly on printing activities.
209:, abbreviated 'Всеукрвидав' or 'Всевидав',
655:Allen Kent, Harold Lancour, Jay E. Daily.
311:Всеукраинское государственное издательство
225:on May 5, 1919, following a decree of the
22:
15:
227:All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee
932:Publishing companies established in 1919
927:Publishing companies of the Soviet Union
740:. Российская книжная палата, 2009. p. 72
722:Ukraine: a Concise Encyclopaedia, Vol. 2
182:The publishing house was founded as the
591:
831:
829:
784:
782:
733:
731:
603:
601:
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810:
808:
806:
804:
802:
800:
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767:
765:
763:
761:
7:
841:. Yale University Press, 2009. p. 81
749:Volodymyr Viktorovych Kalinichenko.
700:
698:
690:All-Ukrainian State Publishing House
683:
681:
679:
651:
649:
647:
645:
643:
641:
639:
637:
623:
621:
619:
617:
307:All-Ukrainian State Publishing House
947:Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic
165:Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic
321:Всеукраїнське державне видавництво
14:
895:. UMI Research Press, 1986. p. 46
323:, abbreviated 'Всеукрдержвидав',
113:State Publishing House of Ukraine
82:State Publishing Union of Ukraine
17:State Publishing House of Ukraine
313:, abbreviated 'Всеукргосиздат',
163:) was a publishing house in the
910:. Springer Nature, 2022. p. 145
704:Peter Brooker, Andrew Thacker.
221:in Ukrainian), being set up in
661:. CRC Press, 1981. pp. 296-297
184:All-Ukrainian Publishing House
1:
952:Ukrainian-language literature
855:The Ukrainian Soviet Republic
199:, abbreviated 'Всеукриздат',
942:Defunct publishing companies
752:Istorii͡a Ukraïny: 1917-2003
673:. Наукова думка, 1978. p. 41
629:ДЕРЖАВНЕ ВИДАВНИЦТВО УКРАЇНИ
611:. Дух и литера, 2006. p. 271
36:Державне видавництво України
907:Translation Under Communism
823:. Springer, 1987. pp. 95-96
273:published the arts journal
196:Vseukrainskoye izdatel'stvo
195:
153:
131:
968:
835:Yohanan Petrovsky-Shtern.
671:З історії книги на Україні
188:Всеукраинское издательство
320:
310:
207:Всеукраїнське видавництво
206:
187:
142:
120:
67:August 21, 1930
21:
790:Книга радянської України
862:, April 1, 1925. p. 145
286:during a short period.
205:in Russian; Ukrainian:
937:1930 disestablishments
776:. Klasyka, 2001. p. 36
719:Volodymyr Kubiĭovych.
495:
411:Zhyttya y revolyutsiya
302:
254:and other locations.
52:May 19, 1919
480:Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky
300:
242:were set up in Kiev,
579:Ukrderzhnatsmenvydav
431:Vasyl Ellan-Blakytny
257:By October 1919 the
18:
889:Myroslava Mudrak.
874:Matthew D. Pauly.
552:-level libraries.
484:Vladimir Korolenko
303:
169:Ukrainian language
815:Bohdan Krawchenko
788:О. В Молодчиков.
607:М. С Куповецкий.
522:Avangard almanakh
405:Chervonyi Shliakh
193:
151:
133:Gosizdat Ukrainii
129:
109:
108:
959:
911:
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711:
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632:
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612:
605:
556:Merger into DVOU
530:
516:Nova Generatsiia
500:
469:
461:Sergey Pilipenko
458:
443:
419:
400:
387:
346:to Ukrainization
335:Vseukrderzhvydav
326:Vseukrderzhvydav
322:
312:
291:Vseukrderzhvydav
284:
208:
198:
192:romanized:
191:
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44:Publishing house
26:
19:
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687:Poster Plakat.
686:
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665:
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635:
627:Бондарчук П.М.
626:
615:
606:
593:
588:
567:
558:
524:
507:Mykola Skrypnyk
463:
452:
450:Volodmyr Koriak
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413:
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348:
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180:
105:
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12:
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5:
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860:Russian Review
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546:Ukrknigotsentr
497:Belles-lettres
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316:Vseukrgosizdat
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179:
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511:Ukrainization
508:
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498:
491:
487:
485:
481:
475:
473:
472:Pavlo Tychyna
467:
462:
456:
451:
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446:Maik Yohansen
441:
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319:, Ukrainian:
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264:
263:Anton Denikin
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103:Ukrainian SSR
97:
94:(1919–1922),
93:
89:
85:
81:
77:
66:
62:
51:
47:
43:
39:
35:
29:
25:
20:
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688:
666:
656:
577:
570:
559:
545:
543:
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520:
514:
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492:
488:
476:
427:Krasne Slovo
426:
422:
409:
403:
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377:
374:
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343:
334:
330:
325:
324:
315:
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306:
304:
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274:
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258:
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239:
238:Branches of
234:
230:
217:
216:
211:
210:
201:
200:
183:
181:
175:
160:
154:
132:
112:
110:
87:Headquarters
525: [
464: [
453: [
438: [
435:Ivan Bagmut
414: [
395: [
382: [
354:khozraschet
344:khozraschet
293:(1920–1922)
279: [
271:Vseukrvydav
267:Vseukrvydav
259:Vseukrvydav
240:Vseukrvydav
235:Vseukrvydav
231:Vseukrvydav
212:Vseukrvydav
202:Vseukrizdat
178:(1919–1920)
176:Vseukrvydav
98:(1922–1930)
32:Native name
921:Categories
586:References
539:Émile Zola
309:(Russian:
276:Mystetstvo
186:(Russian:
155:Derzhvydav
71:1930-08-21
56:1919-05-19
505:In 1927,
370:Leningrad
148:romanized
139:Ukrainian
126:romanized
79:Successor
572:Gosizdat
565:See also
218:Vsevydav
41:Industry
423:Kritika
362:Kharkiv
252:Poltava
244:Kharkov
150::
128::
117:Russian
96:Kharkov
69: (
64:Defunct
54: (
49:Founded
366:Moscow
248:Volyn'
858:, in
550:raion
535:Works
529:]
468:]
457:]
442:]
418:]
399:]
386:]
342:From
283:]
519:and
470:and
425:and
392:Hart
379:Pluh
368:and
223:Kyiv
111:The
92:Kiev
537:of
333:).
331:VDV
329:or
215:or
161:DVU
159:or
923::
867:^
846:^
828:^
817:.
797:^
781:^
760:^
730:^
697:^
678:^
636:^
616:^
594:^
541:.
527:uk
474:.
466:ru
459:,
455:ru
448:,
444:,
440:ru
433:,
421:,
416:ru
408:,
402:,
397:uk
389:,
384:uk
281:uk
265:.
250:,
246:,
190:,
171:.
145:,
141::
137:;
123:,
119::
100:,
115:(
73:)
58:)
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