Ulteriori informazioni
"The amount of sources the author has studied is staggering . . . the book [has] an encyclopedic value and [is] accessible to all scholars interested in political history."-Martin Kragh, Stockholm School of Economics
"Since the Russian experience is still used to vilify the idea of socialism, the debate remains relevant. Van der Linden . . . has now produced a comprehensive scholarly account of the arguments."-Ian Birchall, London Socialist Historians Group
The "Russian Question" was an absolutely central problem for Marxism in the twentieth century. Numerous attempts were made to understand the nature of Soviet society. Here Marcel van der Linden describes the development of these theoretical contributions since 1917.
Marcel van der Linden is research director of the International Institute of Social History and professor in the History of Social Movements at the University of Amsterdam.
Info autore
Marcel van der Linden is research director of the International Institute of Social History and Professor in the History of Social Movements at the University of Amsterdam
Riassunto
A wide-ranging survey of debates within Marxism about the Soviet Union in the twentieth century.
Prefazione
* Conference display at the Historical Materialism conference, Left Forum, and Soviet and Slavic Studies conferences * Direct mail to professors in Slavic and Societ Studies and subscribers to the journal Historical Materialism and Monthly Review * Email to Soviet and Slavic studies list serves * Ads in Monthly Review and New Left Review
Testo aggiuntivo
"Readers of a certain age will recall debates amongabout whether Russia was 'state capitalist' or a 'degenerated workers' state'. The debate was profoundly serious, since it raged among Stalin's victims, who needed to know why they had been defeated, and by what. Since the Russian experience is still used to vilify the idea of socialism, the debate remains relevant. Van der Lindenhas now produced a comprehensive scholarly account of the arguments."--Ian Birchall, London Socialist Historians Group
Relazione
"Readers of a certain age will recall debates amongabout whether Russia was 'state capitalist' or a 'degenerated workers' state'. The debate was profoundly serious, since it raged among Stalin's victims, who needed to know why they had been defeated, and by what. Since the Russian experience is still used to vilify the idea of socialism, the debate remains relevant. Van der Lindenhas now produced a comprehensive scholarly account of the arguments."--Ian Birchall, London Socialist Historians Group