Revolution in Russia: Reassessments of 1917

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Edith Rogovin Frankel, Jonathan Frankel, Baruch Knei-Paz
Cambridge University Press, 30 ene 1992 - 434 páginas
The Russian Revolution of 1917 continues to be a subject of most intense controversy; and the fundamental questions which have divided observers over the last seventy years still stir fierce debate. In this volume, eighteen leading specialists from different generations, countries and schools of thought, re-examine the key issues and events of that crucial year. Some of the articles examine the unfolding crisis 'from below', describing developments in specific localities or organisations: others put the emphasis on the view as seen 'from above', on Lenin as leader of the Bolshevik party and of the emergent Soviet states. Other contributors explore the roles played by the officer corps, the industrialists, the peasants, the factory workers and the Soviets as well as the part of the Press and the different nationalities. Never before has so comprehensive a selection of original essays on 1917, written in the West, been collected in one volume.
 

Índice

Perceptions and reality of labour protest March
7
Soviets as agents of democratisation
17
a case study
34
spontaneity and the October
54
Officers of the general staff and the Kornilov movement
76
The peasantry in the revolutions of 1917
105
October in the IvanovoKineshma industrial region
157
the failure
188
The ethnic Germans in the Russian revolution
274
Lenin socialism and the state in 1917
287
a case
304
the Smolny period
326
Iakovlevs question or the historiography of the problem
365
The libertarians vindicated? The libertarian view of
388
theory action and outcome
406
Index
421

Georgian social democracy in 1917
247

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