Stalin and War, 1918-1953

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Anti-Fascist Jewish Committee
Author_David R. Shearer
authoritarian regimes
Bolshevik
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crisis mobilisation
cycles of Stalinist violence
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Ethnic Deportations
Federal Republic Of Germany
German Troop Deployments
Gori
Great Fatherland War
Great Purges
Joseph Stalin
Mass Operations
Mass Purges
Mass Repression
MGB
Nep
Nep Policy
New Economic Policies of the 1920s
NKVD Reports
NKVD Troops
Percent Gdp
Polish Soviet War
Polish war of 1920
political violence
Post-war
Second World War
Security Police
Soviet internal security
Stalin's Thinking
Stalin's Turn
Stalin's World
Stalinism
State's Security Agency
Top Secret
totalitarian state repression
Tsaritsyn
twentieth century Russia
Vice Versa
War Time
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032043531
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Stalin and War, 1918-1953 is the first book to examine the patterns of radicalized internal violence that characterized the Stalinist regime across the whole of the dictator’s rule, and it is one of the only works to connect patterns of internal violence to the dictator’s perceptions of war and foreign threat.

Discussion focuses on the crisis years 1928-1932, 1936-1939, the Great Fatherland War, and the last war crisis period, 1947-1953. Violent repressions under Stalin were cyclical. They peaked and ebbed but, in each case, they were linked to Stalin’s expectation of war and invasion, to his perceived need for urgent internal mobilization, and to intense foreign policy activity. Stalin’s behavior in each of these perceived war crises followed a pattern established during the dictator's experience as a military commander in the Russian revolutionary wars, and especially during the Polish war in 1919 and 1920. Together, these chapters trace a consistent and interconnected logic of war and repression throughout Stalin’s political life.

This book will be of interest to professional scholars of Soviet history, twentieth-century history, and World War II history, and it is approachable enough to be appreciated by general readers.

David R. Shearer is the Thomas Muncy Keith Professor of History at the University of Delaware and a specialist in the history of Stalinism.

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