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E-grāmata: Historically Inevitable?: Turning Points of the Russian Revolution

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Profile Books Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781847658593
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 17,02 €*
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jun-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Profile Books Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781847658593

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Marx held that the progression of society from capitalism to communism was 'historically inevitable'. In Russia in 1917, it seemed that Marx's theory was being born out in reality. But was the Russian Revolution really inevitable? This collection of fourteen contributions from the world's leading Russian scholars attempts to answer the question by looking back at the key turning points of the revolution. From the Russo-Japanese conflict of 1904-5 through to the appropriation of church property in 1922, and focusing especially on the incredible chain of events in 1917 leading to the October Revolution itself, Historically Inevitable? is a forensic account of Russia's road to revolution. Each contribution gives not only a fast-paced, incisive narrative account of an individual aspect of Revolution but also, for the first time, an intriguing counter-factual analysis of what might have gone differently. Featuring Richard Pipes on the Kornilov affair, Orlando Figes on the October Revolution, Dominic Lieven on foreign intervention and Martin Sixsmith on the attempted assassination of Lenin in 1918, Historically Inevitable? explains how each of these moments, more through blind luck than any historical inevitability, led to the creation of the world's first communist state. Tony Brenton's afterword to the volume draws parallels between the Revolution and the ultimate collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and places the events of 1917 in the context of more recent events in Russia and the Crimea. Featuring contributions from: Donald Crawford - Sean McMeekin - Dominic Lieven - Orlando Figes - Richard Sakwa - Douglas Smith - Martin Sixsmith - Simon Dixon - Boris Kolonitsky - Richard Pipes - Edvard Radzinsky - Catriona Kelly - Erik Landis - Evan Mawdsley

Recenzijas

The revolution does not need historians -- Lenin Communism is the riddle of history solved, and it knows itself to be this solution -- Karl Marx This is a hooligan movement ... all this will pass and become calm -- Empress Alexandra of Russia

Papildus informācija

The essential analysis of the events leading up to October 1917 and beyond, by the world's foremost experts of Russian history
A Note to the Reader ix
Chronology x
Acknowledgements xvii
Map
xviii
Introduction 1(10)
Tony Brenton
1 1900--1920 Foreign intervention: The long view
11(18)
Dominic Lieven
2 September 1911 The assassination of Stolypin
29(19)
Simon Dixon
3 June 1914 Grigory Rasputin and the outbreak of the First World War
48(18)
Douglas Smith
4 March 1917 The last Tsar
66(25)
Donald Crawford
5 April-July 1917 Enter Lenin
91(18)
Sean McMeekin
6 August 1917 The Komilov affair: A tragedy of errors
109(14)
Richard Pipes
7 October 1917 The `harmless drunk': Lenin and the October insurrection
123(19)
Orlando Figes
8 January 1918 The short life and early death of Russian democracy: The Duma and the Constituent Assembly
142(21)
Tony Brenton
9 July 1918 Rescuing the Tsar and his family
163(15)
Edvard Radzinsky
10 August 1918 Fanny Kaplan's attempt to kill Lenin
178(22)
Martin Sixsmith
11 November 1918 Sea change in the Civil War
200(18)
Evan Mawdsley
12 March 1920 The fate of the Soviet countryside
218(26)
Erik C. Landis
13 February 1912 The Bolshevik Reformation
244(18)
Catriona Kelly
14 1917-22 The rise of Leninism: The death of political pluralism in the post-revolutionary Bolshevik party
262(22)
Richard Sakwa
Afterword Lenin and yesterday's Utopia 284(18)
Tony Brenton
Notes 302(29)
Dramatis Personae 331(6)
Contributors 337(2)
Index 339
Tony Brenton was a British diplomat from 1975 to 2009, completing his career as Charge d'Affaires in Washington, and then Ambassador in Moscow. He is now a Fellow of Wolfson College Cambridge, writing a book on the Russia of Peter the Great, and is a regular commentator on contemporary Russian issues.