The End of the Communist RevolutionRoutledge, 2002 - 232 Daniels strives to put perestroika in its long-term historical perspective by placing it in a broad theory of revolutionary process, within the context of Leninism, Stalinism and Brezshnevism. |
Spis treści
Introduction | 1 |
BACK TO THE FUTURE | 5 |
DEATH ON THE OPERATING TABLE | 29 |
3 SEEDS OF ITS OWN DESTRUCTION | 56 |
4 WAS STALINISM COMMUNIST? | 75 |
5 THE LONG AGONY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION | 98 |
6 THE END OF REVOLUTIONARY EMPIRE | 117 |
7 THE END OF THE COMMUNIST MENACE | 136 |
8 IS THERE SOCIALISM AFTER COMMUNISM? | 167 |
Notes | 191 |
210 | |
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28th Congress Alexander Yakovlev American Andropov August Coup authoritarian Bolsheviks Boris Yeltsin Brezhnev bureaucratic capitalism capitalist Central Committee Chernenko Cold War collapse Communism Communist Party conservatives country’s CPSU crisis cultural December democracy democratic doctrine East European East Germany Eastern Europe elections empire enterprise force German Giulietto Chiesa glasnost Gorbachev ibid ideology industrial intellectual Izvestiya Khrushchev leaders leadership Lenin M.S.Gorbachev Marx Marxism-Leninism Marxist Mikhail Mikhail Gorbachev military moderate revolutionary revival modern Moscow movement nationalist neo-Stalinist November nuclear October official organization party apparatus Party Congress Party’s peasants People’s perestroika phase Politburo political postrevolutionary dictatorship Pravda president prime minister quoted regime Report revolutionary process Russian Revolution secretary September 1991 Shevardnadze socialism socialist society Soviet economy Soviet Union Speech Stalin Stalinist Stalinist system struggle superpower Supreme Soviet theory totalitarian Trotsky turn USSR West Western workers Yakovlev Yeltsin York Zaslavskaya