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Jay Bergman The French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian (Hardback) (UK IMPORT)
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- Book Title
- The French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics
- Publication Name
- French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics, Political Thought, and Culture
- Title
- The French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics
- Format
- Hardcover
- ISBN-10
- 0198842708
- EAN
- 9780198842705
- ISBN
- 9780198842705
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press, Incorporated
- Genre
- History
- Release Year
- 2019
- Release Date
- 14/08/2019
- Language
- English
- Country/Region of Manufacture
- GB
- Item Height
- 1.4in
- Item Length
- 9.5in
- Item Width
- 6.3in
- Item Weight
- 33.5 Oz
- Publication Year
- 2019
- Type
- Textbook
- Number of Pages
- 568 Pages
關於產品
Product Information
Because they were Marxists, the Bolsheviks in Russia, both before and after taking power in 1917, believed that the past was prologue: that embedded in history was a Holy Grail, a series of mysterious, but nonetheless accessible and comprehensible, universal laws that explained the course of history from beginning to end. Those who understood these laws would be able to mould the future to conform to their own expectations. But what should the Bolsheviks do if their Marxist ideology proved to be either erroneous or insufficient-if it could not explain, or explain fully, the course of events that followed the revolution they carried out in the country they called the Soviet Union? Something else would have to perform this function. The underlying argument of this volume is that the Bolsheviks saw the revolutions in France in 1789, 1830, 1848, and 1871 as supplying practically everything Marxism lacked. In fact, these four events comprised what for the Bolsheviks was a genuine Revolutionary Tradition. The English Revolution and the Puritan Commonwealth of the seventeenth century were not without utility-the Bolsheviks cited them and occasionally utilized them as propaganda-but these paled in comparison to what the revolutions in France offered a century later, namely legitimacy, inspiration, guidance in constructing socialism and communism, and, not least, useful fodder for political and personal polemics.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0198842708
ISBN-13
9780198842705
eBay Product ID (ePID)
12038255080
Product Key Features
Publication Name
French Revolutionary Tradition in Russian and Soviet Politics, Political Thought, and Culture
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2019
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
568 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
9.5in
Item Height
1.4in
Item Width
6.3in
Item Weight
33.5 Oz
Additional Product Features
Lc Classification Number
Dk258
Reviews
Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided., "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs "There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs"There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review"This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History"... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review"Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review"Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly"...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review"...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult"Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia"This monograph offers any student of Russian history a unique lens through which to traverse the two centuries between 1789 and 1989." -- Adam Coker, The American Historical Review, "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- Olena Palko, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs"There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review"This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History"... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review"This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History"Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review"Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly"...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review"...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult"Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia"This is an excellent, nuanced, and comprehensive study of the often contradictory and transactional relationship of Russia's 19th and 20th century intellectuals with France's heavily mythologized revolutionary tradition." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 50, "There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs"There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review"This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History"... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review"Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review"Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly"...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review"...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult"Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia"This is an excellent, nuanced, and comprehensive study of the often contradictory and transactional relationship of Russia's 19th and 20th century intellectuals with France's heavily mythologized revolutionary tradition." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 50The essays implicitly remind us that the Renaissance in this great book is an intellectual and cultural construction of the nineteenth century and of the afterlife of German philosophical idealism. This volume reveals so much about Burckhardt's method and interest to justify why modern scholars have had their reservations about his work." -- Comptes Rendus, "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs "There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History "... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review "This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here." -- Jonathan Beecher, the Journal of Modern History "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia "This is an excellent, nuanced, and comprehensive study of the often contradictory and transactional relationship of Russia's 19th and 20th century intellectuals with France's heavily mythologized revolutionary tradition." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 50, "This excellent monograph examines the protracted musings by successive generations of Russia's radical intellectuals on the changing applicability to Russian conditions of mythologies and counter-mythologies in an emergent French Revolutionary Tradition. It illustrates the potency of historical myth-making, as individual events from the past were distilled into emblems of transcendent historical significance." -- Frederick Corney, Professor of History, Department of History, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, USA, International Affairs"There is much to learn from Bergman's exposition that will be usefully consulted by a range of specialists" -- Ian D. Thatcher, Slavonic and East European Review"This is a very impressive book on a fascinating topic that has not up to now been treated in anything like the depth and complexity to be found here... One comes away from this fine book with great admiration for the skill with which Jay Bergman has untangled the intellectual gymnastics through which Russian and Soviet thinkers charted their own past, pressent, and future by drawing on French analogies." -- Jonathan Beecher, The Journal of Modern History"... the book is a goldmine of detail about a formative influence on the Bolshevik leadership" -- Jonathan Daly, the Slavic Review"Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review"Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly"...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review"...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult"Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia, "Bergman's book is scholarly, thoroughly enjoyable, and thought -- provoking. It is hard to disagree with his general conclusion that the Bolsheviks were constantly forced to improvise, and "their improvisations depended for their plausibility on their finding precedents in the modern history of France" (p. 493)." -- Geoffrey Swain, The Russian Review "Bergman's book is an impressive work embodying an enormous amount of research. It must be the most comprehensive study of the subject to date, and much can be learned from it." -- James D. White, European History Quarterly "...this is an excellent, exhaustively researched book, an encyclopaedic examination of the topic, and an important contribution to our understanding of Bolshevik thought. It will be of considerable value to anyone interested in the fate of the Russian or French revolutions." -- James Ryan, English Historical Review "...the reviewed book on the role of the French Revolution in Russian intellectual discourse is important, not just because it elucidates the important aspects of Russian intellectual history, but because it is a perfect snapshot of the time when the West, in all its manifestations, including its historical imagination, ruled supreme in Russia's - and not only Russia's, of course - intellectual life." -- Dmitry Shlapentokh, Indiana University South Bend, H/Soz/Kult "Bergman has produced a fine piece of intellectual history that sheds new light on the Bolsheviks and the Soviet regime over which they presided." -- Gavin Murray-Miller, Revolutionary Russia
Table of Content
PART I: 17891. The Initial Reception of the French Revolution2. The French Revolution in the Russian Revolutionary Movement3. The Marxist Inheritance of the French Revolution4. Lenin: The Russian Robespierre5. Bolsheviks and Mensheviks on the Jacobins and the Girondins6. 1917: Russian Jacobins Come to Power7. Mythologising the New Soviet Regime8. The Phantom of the Soviet Thermidor9. Stalin: The Jacobins as Proto-Stalinists10. Returning to the Leninist Line under Khrushchev and Brezhnev11. Transgressing the Leninist Line in the Gorbachev EraPART II: 183012. The Revolution That Stopped Too SoonPART III: 184813. The Revolution That Failed14. The Phantom of the Russian BonapartePART IV: 187115. Revolution as MartyrdomConclusionBibliography
Copyright Date
2019
Topic
Russia & the Former Soviet Union, Europe / Eastern, Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, Europe / France, Modern / 20th Century, Revolutionary
Lccn
2019-938179
Dewey Decimal
947.083
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
23
Genre
History, Political Science
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