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
12 - Stalinism and the politics of post-Soviet history
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 spring 1993 an official in the Russian Ministry of Education responsible for humanities education explained that future elementary and secondary school history textbooks would ‘eliminate all the excesses of our old history writing’ and would emphasise a more harmonious view of the Russian past. When pressed further, the official promised that class struggle, wars, and revolutions generally, and the first half of the twentieth century (the Soviet period) in particular, would receive far less attention than they have in past curricula in favour of a more prominent place for nineteenth-century ‘civilisation’, by which he meant Russian culture and religion. One of the aims in the new privileging of the nineteenth century was to integrate Russian history into greater world historical processes and deemphasise what had been previously trumpeted in textbooks as the uniqueness of the Russian experience. For this official, and for many other historians and citizens of the post-Soviet states, the Soviet period has become an aberration of Russian and human history. Rather than grapple with the painful facts of Stalinism, its origins and consequences, they prefer ‘a more harmonious view of the past’. Indeed, a widely articulated desire to escape from the tragedies of the twentieth-century history has been one common response to the revelations about the Stalin period that have emerged since 1985 and to the debates about the meaning of those revelations.
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- Information
- Stalinism and NazismDictatorships in Comparison, pp. 285 - 310Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997