Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: The regimes and their dictators: perspectives of comparison
- 1 Stalin and his Stalinism: power and authority in the Soviet Union, 1930–53
- 2 Bureaucracy and the Stalinist state
- 3 Cumulative radicalisation and progressive self-destruction as structural determinants of the Nazi dictatorship
- 4 ‘Working towards the Führer’: reflections on the nature of the Hitler dictatorship
- 5 Stalin in the mirror of the other
- 6 The contradictions of continuous revolution
- 7 From Blitzkrieg to total war: controversial links between image and reality
- 8 Stalin, the Red Army, and the ‘Great Patriotic War’
- 9 The economics of war in the Soviet Union during World War II
- 10 From ‘Great Fatherland War’ to the Second World War: new perspectives and future prospects
- 11 German exceptionalism and the origins of Nazism: the career of a concept
- 12 Stalinism and the politics of post-Soviet history
- 13 Work, gender and everyday life: reflections on continuity, normality and agency in twentieth-century Germany
- Afterthoughts
- Index
2 - Bureaucracy and the Stalinist state
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: The regimes and their dictators: perspectives of comparison
- 1 Stalin and his Stalinism: power and authority in the Soviet Union, 1930–53
- 2 Bureaucracy and the Stalinist state
- 3 Cumulative radicalisation and progressive self-destruction as structural determinants of the Nazi dictatorship
- 4 ‘Working towards the Führer’: reflections on the nature of the Hitler dictatorship
- 5 Stalin in the mirror of the other
- 6 The contradictions of continuous revolution
- 7 From Blitzkrieg to total war: controversial links between image and reality
- 8 Stalin, the Red Army, and the ‘Great Patriotic War’
- 9 The economics of war in the Soviet Union during World War II
- 10 From ‘Great Fatherland War’ to the Second World War: new perspectives and future prospects
- 11 German exceptionalism and the origins of Nazism: the career of a concept
- 12 Stalinism and the politics of post-Soviet history
- 13 Work, gender and everyday life: reflections on continuity, normality and agency in twentieth-century Germany
- Afterthoughts
- Index
Summary
In a nutshell
Bureaucracy, as a problem or historical factor, did not play much of a role in the thinking of the Bolsheviks. The analysis of the Bolsheviks was conducted mostly in terms of social classes whereas bureaucracy was not considered a class – or was not supposed to be one. The appearance of bureaucracy as a problem (at first as ‘bureaucratism’ rather than bureaucracy) came with accession to power – and muddled the concepts as well as the realities.
An interplay of perceptions in ideological terms with changing political realities (facts of life) is our story, as well as that of the Soviet system at large.
We need to consider two key stages. The first involved the discovery of the apparatus – and its crucial force – when ex-tsarist government officials went on strike in 1918 against the new regime.
In stage two the state apparatus became a must – and the cooperation of specialists (experts), obviously from the previous regime, was a painful need and precondition for making the state machinery work.
Class composition seemed to be the biggest worry – notably because officials of the old regime, ‘alien’ both ideologically and in terms of class, were known to epitomise bureaucratism.
This was why acquiring ‘their own cadres’ – with the right class origin and ideology to be formed in the regime's own educational institutions – became for the Bolsheviks a crucial task ahead.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Stalinism and NazismDictatorships in Comparison, pp. 53 - 74Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
- 3
- Cited by