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Re: Ok, since you're interested, here is some "light" reading for you. Approach with caution. wahooka Send a noteboard - 15/03/2010 11:05:22 PM


Writing on the Russian Revolution has been complicated by the antagonism between the United States and the Soviet Union for most of the twentieth century, leading historians to question how effectively they could both remain objective and provide analysis. Furthermore interpretations of the Russian Revolution have been approached in two discrete ways, with the fall of the Soviet Union demarcating two distinct periods of writing on the subject. However, this tension and division has not prevented the historiography of the Russian Revolution from being a topic that has been interpreted in different ways vis-à-vis the decade in which the work was written that also closely paralleled trends in historical writing. Finally, the importance of the Russian Revolution for subsequent twentieth-century history continues to generate interest in the subject and there could be more options for study and interpretation given the current trends that focus on comparative, transnational, and global histories.
The approach taken by historians to the subject of the Russian Revolution has generated debates on just what the role of the historian is vis-à-vis a state which was, at the time of writing, an antagonistic foe of the state in which the historian currently resided in. Writing after the collapse of the Soviet Union, in The Russian Revolution, 1917, Rex Wade stated that, “the collapse of the Soviet Union has made it easier to put the Russian Revolution into better historical perspective. Writing on it no longer involves an implied judgment on an existing government and system.” [1] For Wade, historians who wrote on the Russian Revolution before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 were making judgments on the enemy of the United States. He does not state this in the selected quote, but the existence of the Cold War cannot be discounted. It is part of the social and cultural milieu in which historians wrote in before 1991. Whether those judgments are negative or positive, they did complicate matters for historians attempting to understand the genesis of the Soviet Union.



It is worth to mention that this Soviet Union - After Soviet Union division in interpretation of the Russian Revolution goes the other way around as well, when the Soviet (and Soviet Block) historians of Soviet Era were influenced by propaganda and their works were distorted from reality.

Incidentally, I inadvertently managed to borrow a Soviet Era copy of History of Canada for my thesis last year. I started browsing through the book and found out that a lot of chapters were called like Class Struggle in Canada and similarly. So, I went and looked when it was published and found out not only that it was published in 80's but it was also a translation of Russian authors. The book was absolutely unusable for my thesis, I don't know why they still have books like this in the library, but it was pretty funny just to see the names of chapters.

As you later mention, one of the biggest advantages of today's historians, aside from the fall of the Iron Curtain and the cessation of enmities, is the fact that they are able to use original documents and other information, but I still wonder how much data has been lost, tampered with or is still being censored.
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So, let's talk about Doctor Zhivago. - 15/03/2010 12:51:09 PM 1556 Views
I liked it a lot. - 15/03/2010 03:24:34 PM 820 Views
So far, so good - 15/03/2010 03:58:44 PM 807 Views
There are lots of good quotes. - 15/03/2010 09:20:26 PM 671 Views
I have finally finished it. - 22/03/2010 12:31:24 AM 833 Views
There will be more later. Much more. So lets start at the beginning. - 15/03/2010 04:22:15 PM 740 Views
... I'm clearly lacking in braincells. - 15/03/2010 05:03:35 PM 834 Views
... yes, you moved to scotland? *NM* - 15/03/2010 05:42:21 PM 318 Views
It's not contagious! - 15/03/2010 05:47:41 PM 666 Views
It probably is. Don't worry, we still like you! *NM* - 15/03/2010 09:55:07 PM 322 Views
I didn't notice the Anna Karenina connection. That's a good point. - 15/03/2010 09:26:41 PM 772 Views
Yes. Perhaps we should tell the non-Russian speakers/readers that the name of the protagonist, - 15/03/2010 10:22:39 PM 877 Views
Zhivago is the Church Slavonic genitive singular of живой (zhivoi), "living" - 15/03/2010 11:18:23 PM 723 Views
I knew those - 15/03/2010 11:22:02 PM 815 Views
I thought this was a great read, and I'm sure I've missed a lot, which will make a reread good too. - 15/03/2010 05:16:19 PM 871 Views
On balance, there IS a love story. Just not quite the one that most people think. - 15/03/2010 09:34:20 PM 777 Views
I noticed that as well - 15/03/2010 09:42:04 PM 857 Views
There is a lot of Christian eschatology, too - 15/03/2010 09:46:59 PM 772 Views
Yes - 15/03/2010 11:23:23 PM 912 Views
My initial thoughts - 15/03/2010 06:02:21 PM 821 Views
Re: My initial thoughts - 15/03/2010 08:54:15 PM 748 Views
Which idioms were you talking about? - 15/03/2010 09:43:09 PM 799 Views
Re: Which idioms were you talking about? - 15/03/2010 10:07:23 PM 778 Views
The names are not quite as hard as it may seem at first - 15/03/2010 09:41:06 PM 763 Views
There appears to be a lull, so some background - How many of you have read anything about - 15/03/2010 08:19:07 PM 743 Views
This is my first novel in that genre, fiction or non. - 15/03/2010 08:22:04 PM 662 Views
I've read bits & pieces. - 15/03/2010 08:33:41 PM 785 Views
Ok, since you're interested, here is some "light" reading for you. Approach with caution. - 15/03/2010 08:47:42 PM 910 Views
Interestingly, I'm seeing parallels now that I'm reading Gibbon. - 15/03/2010 09:53:15 PM 779 Views
Koenker was mine for Soviet history. - 15/03/2010 10:08:40 PM 1053 Views
Re: Ok, since you're interested, here is some "light" reading for you. Approach with caution. - 15/03/2010 11:05:22 PM 795 Views
Finally got around to reading this. Thanks for sharing. *NM* - 22/03/2010 04:45:24 PM 318 Views
You're welcome. *NM* - 22/03/2010 05:14:26 PM 277 Views
I knew a bit about it. - 15/03/2010 08:36:20 PM 883 Views
Fiction or non-fiction? - 15/03/2010 09:21:04 PM 915 Views
Do you mean Ten Days that Shook the World by John Reed? - 15/03/2010 09:54:34 PM 765 Views
Ten...I was typing from memories of close to 15 years ago - 15/03/2010 10:57:05 PM 762 Views
Either, though specifically I was thinking of non-fiction. - 15/03/2010 10:11:52 PM 802 Views
That's what I was thinking of when I read it - 15/03/2010 10:59:36 PM 805 Views
Enough to understand everything easily enough. - 21/04/2010 01:03:54 AM 634 Views
My own personal thoughts on Doctor Zhivago - 15/03/2010 11:44:05 PM 1000 Views
This review has been helpful so far for me. - 23/03/2010 11:39:51 PM 716 Views
Essay I just finished writing on the book - 16/03/2010 01:26:23 AM 1125 Views
I'm really enjoying it. - 16/03/2010 03:05:25 AM 805 Views
Hey, if I can come late to the party, so can you. *NM* - 21/04/2010 01:04:15 AM 244 Views
I'm still sailing through it - 16/03/2010 09:25:34 PM 800 Views
Some questions. - 19/03/2010 08:27:38 AM 719 Views
Class can be tricky given the Russian context. - 19/03/2010 05:09:14 PM 895 Views
Grand. Thanks for the answers. - 20/03/2010 02:33:18 PM 741 Views
As an addendum to what Greg wrote: - 19/03/2010 05:56:56 PM 768 Views
Re: As an addendum to what Greg wrote: - 20/03/2010 02:36:36 PM 787 Views
No, Tonya was exiled. It was a fortune of timing. - 20/03/2010 05:22:44 PM 787 Views
The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them - 21/03/2010 05:34:03 PM 817 Views
It looks a bit strained to me. - 22/03/2010 03:28:34 AM 707 Views
So far the reviews are pretty glowing, as are the Amazon reviewers. - 22/03/2010 01:44:19 PM 815 Views
In other news, I read about 100 pages of The Island at the Center of the World. - 22/03/2010 03:48:47 PM 756 Views
I figured that you would like it. - 22/03/2010 05:14:06 PM 881 Views

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