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Two Books on Soviet Historiography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Extract
Western observers of Soviet life have been apt to construe Soviet historiography as a political barometer. The character of statements rather than the events purportedly described by them has been the object of study. The tendentiousness of Soviet historical writing —its distortions and its employment of such elusive concepts as “relations of production”—have been not so much obstacles to investigation as they have been its subject matter.
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- Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1968
References
1 See Richards, Edward B., “Marxism and Marxist Movements in Latin America in Recent Soviet Historical Writing,” Hispanic American Historical Review, xiv (November 1965), 577–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Oswald, J. Gregory, “Contemporary Soviet Research on Latin America,” Latin American Research Review, 1 (Spring 1966), 77–96Google Scholar.
2 Translated in Stalin, J. V., Problems of Leninism (Moscow 1953), 483–97Google Scholar.
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