Stalin Passage to revolution

Ronald Grigor Suny

Book - 2020

"This biography of the young Stalin is more than the story of how a revolutionary was made: it is the first serious investigation, using the full range of Russian and Georgian archives, to explain Stalin's evolution from a romantic and idealistic youth into a hardened political operative. Suny takes seriously the first half of Stalin's life: his intellectual development, his views on issue of nationalities and nationalism, and his role in the Social Democratic debates of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This book narrates an almost tragic downfall; we see Stalin transform from a poor provincial seminarian, who wrote romantic nationalist poetry, into a fearsome and brutal ruler. Many biographers of Stalin tur...n to shallow psychological analysis in seeking to explain his embrace of revolution, focusing on the beatings he suffered at the hands of his father or his hero-worship of Lenins, or sensationalizing Stalin's involvement in violent activity. Suny seeks to show Stalin in the complex context of the oppressive tsarist police-state in which he lived and debates and party politics that animated the revolutionary circles in which he moved. Though working from fragmentary evidence from disparate sources, Suny is able to place Stalin in his intellectual and political context and reveal, not only a different analysis of the man's psychological and intellectual transformation, but a revisionist history of the revolutionary movements themselves before 1917"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Ronald Grigor Suny (author)
Physical Description
xviii, 857 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691182032
9780691202716
  • Growing up Georgian
  • Breaking left
  • The making of a Bolshevik
  • Revolutionary underground
  • Staying the course
  • From outside in
  • The steep path to power.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A comprehensive, deeply researched study of one of the world's most brutal dictators as he took the paths that would lead him to power. Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) was a frail boy who willed himself to improvement, physical and mental, with a program that Theodore Roosevelt would have recognized. He was remarkable, writes history professor Suny, but "at the same time quite ordinary, a small man placed in extraordinary circumstances." Throughout his life, though, Stalin made efforts to excel at all he did, whether singing in a choir or writing poetry. "He was not above correcting his teachers," Suny notes in his long but well-paced narrative. Without dipping too deeply into psychobiography, the author examines aspects of his home life that might have influenced his emergent defensiveness, and later paranoia, including a violent-tempered, alcoholic father and a mother who, though steely, encouraged her son to excel. Stalin left home for school in a larger city, moved into revolutionary circles that soon took him farther afield, and steadily rose in the ranks of Russian Marxists. Along the way, he used what Suny gently calls "dubious means" to consolidate his power as he aligned ever more closely with Lenin, who was in exile during much of the time that Stalin organized revolutionary activities in Moscow and Petrograd. Stalin was in exile, too, but almost immediately escaped from the remote Siberian town where he was sent. He helped engineer the Bolshevik victory over the post-czarist government and their Menshevik rivals. As Suny writes, "it was the more extreme picture sketched by the Bolsheviks--of the whole of propertied society, liberals, conservatives, and reactionaries alike, as the enemy of the working class--that brought people out of the factories into the streets." In all that effort--and in his clashes with fellow revolutionaries, notably Leon Trotsky--lay the seed for his later dictatorship. A portrait of the totalitarian as a young artist, of great interest to any student of modern history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.