新しいソビエト人(あたらしいソビエトじん、英: New Soviet man、露: новый советский человекnovy sovetsky chelovek)または新しいソビエト的人間(あたらしいソビエトてきにんげん)とは、ソビエト連邦共産党が提唱した人間像であり、ソビエト連邦の全国民において聳え立つような資質を持った典型 (アーキタイプ)が、統一されたソビエト人民とソビエト国家を創り出すものとされた[1][2]
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Compare: Berdyayev, Nikolai Aleksandrovich (1937). The Origin of Russian Communism. Ann Arbor paperbacks for the study of communism and Marxism. University of Michigan Press (1960発行). p. 182. ISBN9780472060344. https://books.google.com/books?id=qBVFuCrjH4gC2015年6月12日閲覧. "[...] communism claims to have created not only the new society but also the new man. They talk a great deal in Soviet Russia about the new man, about a new spiritual make-up. Foreigners who have visited Soviet Russia are also fond of talking about it [...]"
Kheveshi M. An Explanatory Dictionary of the Ideological and Political Terms of the Soviet Period (Хевеши М.А. Толковый словарь идеологических и политических терминов советского периода.) Moscow, Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniya (2002) ISBN5-7133-1147-3(ロシア語)
Herschel and Edith Alt, The New Soviet Man. His Upbringing and Character Development, New York: Bookman Associates, Inc., 1964 (from a review: "The aim of the Alts' study was to portray the impact upon the character of the individual of the entire Soviet system, of which child rearing and education are a part.")
Steiner, Evgeny. Avant-garde and Construction of the New Man (Штейнер Е.С. Авангард и построение Нового Человека). Moscow: New Literary Observer, 2002. (The English version of this book was published under the title Stories for Little Comrades. Seattle & London: University of Washington Press, 1999).
Lynne Atwood. Creating the New Soviet Woman, Women's Magazines as Engineers of Female Identity, 1922-53. Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited 1999 (from Springer Link: “This book explores the Soviet attempt to propagandise the 'new Soviet woman' through the magazines Rabotnitsa and Krest'yanka from the 1920s to the end of the Stalin era. Balancing work and family did not prove easy in a climate of shifting economic and demographic priorities, and the book charts the periodic changes made to the model.”)
Barbara Evans Clements. The Birth of the New Soviet Woman. Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; Kennan Institute Occasional Paper Series #140, 1981.