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Full Description
Reflections on Stalinism distills decades of historical thought and research, bringing together twelve senior scholars of Soviet history who began their careers during the Cold War to examine their views of Stalinism. They present insights into the role of personality in statecraft, the social underpinnings of dictatorship and state terrorism, historians' attachments to their subjects, historical causality, the applicability of Marxist categories to Soviet history, the relationship of Soviet history to post-Soviet Russia, and more. Essays address the transformation of a peasant country into a superpower and the causes and scale of domestic bloodshed. Reflections on Stalinism ultimately tackles an age-old question: Do powerful people make history or are they the product of it?
Contents
Introduction: Reflecting on Reflections
Part One: The Social
1. Personal Reflections on Stalinism and Social History
2. Revisiting Stalinist Social Mobility
3. Marxism and the Study of the Stalinist System
Part Two: Mass Repression/Terror
4. Stalinism, the Terror, and Social History
5. Lost and Found Revolutions: Between Emancipatory Dreams and Mass Terror in the Soviet Union
6. Wrestling with Aspects of Interwar Stalinism
Part Three: Beliefs and Emotions
7. Affective Dispositions, Bolshevism and Stalinism: The Rational Actor in His Emotional Environment
8. Fear, Belief, and Stalinism
Part Four: The Ideological
9. Stalin as Historian and Legalist
10. Stalin as Revolutionary Social Democrat
Part Five: The Spatial
11. Power, Violence, and Rurality in the Soviet Union in the 1930s
12. How I Learned to Read Stalin's Time in Space



