Stalinist Dictatorship

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Bolshevik party
Bolshevik party dynamics
Category=NHD
Chris Ward
Class Enemies
Collective Farms
Early Twentieth Century Russia
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Final Solutions
forced collectivisation
Forced Labour Camps
Industrialization Debate
interpreting Stalin's legacy
Kirov Assassination
Kolkhoz Chairmen
Leonid Nikolaev
Nazi Soviet War
Nep
Peasant Witnesses
Polish Communist Party
political purges analysis
Professor Nove
Raion Center
Raion Soviet
Red Army's Officer Corps
Red Army’s Officer Corps
Rural Raion
Russian Orthodox Church
second revolution
socialist state formation
Soviet historiography
Soviet Patriotism
Stalin's Ambition
Stalin's Personality
Stalinism
Stalinism everyday life
Stalin’s Ambition
Stalin’s Personality
state-directed industrialisation
USSR's Demise
USSR’s Demise
Wider Economic Rationality
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138160224
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jan 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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From the late 1920s onwards, forced collectivisation, state-directed industrialisation, mass purging and the party's control of culture, refashioned Russia and gave birth to a new type of society. The 'second revolution' and its aftermath remodelled the Soviet State and the Bolshevik party, restructured all institutions and reconstituted all social relationships. Millions found their lives changed forever. Nothing was untouched and no one was unaffected. Presiding over these momentous changes was Joseph Stalin, one of the twentieth century's most disturbing figures. "The Stalinst Dictatorship" looks at the regime from three different perspectives. Section one focuses on interpretations of Stalin's character and attempts to explain the everlasting puzzle of the relationship between events and personality. Section two looks at Stalin's role within the Soviet Union, and sees him as only one part (albeit an important one) of a complex culture of politics and administration. The final section examines the ways in which the Soviet people handled socialism, and how Stalinism functioned on the ground. The vicissitudes in Stalin's reputation reflect the vicissitudes of the history of the twentieth century itself. Stalin became a symbol of a new system, a 'socialist' alternative to the capatilist path.