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Stalinism as a Way of Life

DOC Stalinism as a Way of Life by Lewis Siegelbaum; Andrei Sokolov in History

Description

This epic history compares the empires built by Spain and Britain in the Americas; from Columbus’s arrival in the New World to the end of Spanish colonial rule in the early nineteenth century. J. H. Elliott; one of the most distinguished and versatile historians working today; offers us history on a grand scale; contrasting the worlds built by Britain and by Spain on the ruins of the civilizations they encountered and destroyed in North and South America.Elliott identifies and explains both the similarities and differences in the two empires’ processes of colonization; the character of their colonial societies; their distinctive styles of imperial government; and the independence movements mounted against them. Based on wide reading in the history of the two great Atlantic civilizations; the book sets the Spanish and British colonial empires in the context of their own times and offers us insights into aspects of this dual history that still influence the Americas.


#447543 in Books Lewis Siegelbaum 2004-05-10Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.21 x .82 x 6.14l; 1.13 #File Name: 0300101279368 pagesStalinism as a Way of Life A Narrative in Documents


Review
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. A fair portrayal of life in the early years of the USSRBy G.E.This book chronicles the time period from around when Stalin assumed power in the USSR to just before World War Two. So; basically we're talking about the 1930's; mostly. Many of the documents are quite revealing about the state of affairs in the USSR; both positive (increased education; literacy and skills; for example) and negative (the atrocious agrarian policy with the kolkhoz farms; the appalling conditions in Soviet orphanages; etc.) Many letters reveal a populace that wasn't afraid to voice their opinions and complain to the state that claimed to represent them; though; which in a way puts the lie to the claim that the USSR was a monolithic terror-state that would execute anyone who spoke out (although there was plenty of grovelling towards "comrade Stalin" as well; who had an impressive personality cult by any measure; as this book demonstrates). The USSR was actually a weak state in some ways...backstabbing was a favorite past-time for Soviet bureaucrats. Mass executions and a chaotic situation in the countryside don't point towards a state that was firmly in control.This book includes extensive commentary from the authors; who help place the letters and events in Soviet society in their proper context. I'd recommend reading this if you're interested in the social and economic history of the USSR.3 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Chilling dig into the archives reveals the horrors of Soviet lifeBy David LjunggrenThanks to careful digging through some of the many archives in Moscow; Siegelbaum and Sokolov have produced a minor masterpiece. They selected 157 documents (many of them letters; but some secret reports) showing the devastation wrought on the lives of Soviet citizens during the 1930s. Reading through these often heartbreaking pleas; denunciations and complaints gives you an idea of the damage done to people by Stalin's decisions to rip apart the agricultural system; focus blindly on industrialisation while purging millions of allegedly unreliable elements.As the authors say: "In reading the documents; one cannot help but be astonished at how skilfully the country's leadership created hardships and problems for its citizens; only to solve them with considerably less success." Tens of millions starved while others walked around in bare feet or attended wretched schools because all elements of society were in total chaos. What also comes through clearly is that the quickest thinkers usually did best; for they had the foresight to loudly pledge allegiance to the Communist system while the majority of the population struggled to work out what was happening.And if you take the documents here at face value; those Communist bosses were often total incompetents; more keen to curry favour with Moscow and steal what they could for family and friends rather than doing their jobs. When you finish this remarkly depressing work you do wonder quite how anything ever got done in the Soviet Union and you also marvel at how much potential the country squandered.5 of 7 people found the following review helpful. "Incredible physical and psychological overload"By Harry EagarThe popular picture of the Soviet Union in the 1930s as a bloody; erratic; dark prison inhabited by scurrying; cowed; silent victims of totalitarianism is only half correct. The victims were not that silent.Using their often newly acquired ability to write; they sent outspoken complaints right to the top; or nearly the top; and to newspapers. They even wrote the NKVD demanding and -- evidently -- expecting justice.Few of these complaints were published; but they weren't cast into the round file either. They were catalogued and saved and now they are being mined for an unparalleled worm's eye view of "Stalinism as a Way of Life."It was not different in principle from tsarism; even if the government was far more efficient at persecuting its citizens. But just as their grandparents had blamed misery on local officialdom and believed that if only "little father the tsar" knew what was happening; changes would be made; grandchildren believed in the goodness of centralism. Change "little father" to Stalin; or; more often; Kalinin or Krupskaia; and the grandchildren's complaints are not greatly different from what the grandparents had.Except that; as Siegelbaum and Sokolov point out (in the last words); we don't have the written thoughts of the tsarist underclasses; since tsarism was careful to keep them illiterate. More than half a century ago; Alexander Werth wrote that Russian parents; despite the persecutions; were often grateful to the Bolsheviks for at least teaching their children to read.Kneejerk anti-Bolsheviks label Werth a Red stooge for saying so; but we now know that parents do think like that. Micronesian parents felt that way about the Japanese; after centuries of indifference and oppression by the Spaniards and Germans; although otherwise it would seem they had no more reason to admire the Japanese than the Russians (and non-Russian nationalities) had to like the Communists.These selections from letters and some government reports are assembled into six categories: the beginning of collectivization; the emergence of the nomenklatura; the constitutional "debate;" the false dawn before the mass roundups; the countryside and childhood. The chapter on childhood is the most poignant.Not all were complaints; some were denunciations by (probably) ambitious apparatchiks or sincere "new socialist men." As the authors say; "Social support for the regime . . . (was) located in distinct social groups . . . to whom the prodigious expansion of state power under Stalin appealed."Or who just enjoyed being overdogs after having been underdogs. You have to read the endnotes to get the full flavor. The editors barely allude to; but they do hint at the reason these letter writers expected improvements despite hunger; Kafkaesque arrests; rapes and other sufferings: People believed Bolshevik promises that the government was trying to improve things. No one ever had any reason -- not even a false hope -- to expect anything better out of tsarism. As one old peasant who; late in life; acquired a piglet; something he'd never had before; put it: "I don't remember any youth in my past."Siegelbaum and Sokolov cut to the heart of the matter with a pithy comment about the "two eternal questions" of Russia: What is to be done? and Who is to blame?The letters are explicated and commented on in passages by the editors that are sometimes obscure.This abridged version is intended primarily as a text in undergraduate classes but is anything but a tedious textbook. Thanks to the Internet; purchasers can avoid the cost of the expensive full edition by reading the excised letters on line.

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