Stalinist Terror: New PerspectivesJohn Arch Getty, Roberta Thompson Manning Cambridge University Press, 1993年6月25日 - 294 頁 This collection of essays by scholars from five nations - the United States, Great Britain, Australia, France, and Russia - makes several major contributions to the understanding of Stalinist terror in the 1930s. The essays explore in greater depth than before the background of the terror and patterns of persecution, while providing more empirically founded and substantiated estimates of the numbers of Stalin's victims. Some contributors tap unexplored or underutilized source materials while others have taken advantage of glasnost and the opening of Soviet archives and libraries for the years of the terror to draw on freshly available archival and secondary materials. Many of the essays are informed by distinct trends in social and political history, and they approach Stalinist terror with fresh methods and perspectives. The volume supplements works that have focused exclusively on Stalin's personality by concentrating instead on preconditions, mentalities, economics, and specific groups. Although Stalin remains the central personality in the terror, other leaders, institutions, and social groups played important roles, and by analyzing them the essays in the volume help to provide a more complete and balanced view of the phenomenon of the terror as a whole. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 70 筆
第 頁
... Victims of Stalinism : How Many ? ALEC NOVE 261 14 More Light on the Scale of Repression and Excess Mortality in the Soviet Union in the 1930s STEPHEN G. WHEATCROFT Index 275 291 Acknowledgments We are grateful to a number of friends ...
... Victims of Stalinism : How Many ? ALEC NOVE 261 14 More Light on the Scale of Repression and Excess Mortality in the Soviet Union in the 1930s STEPHEN G. WHEATCROFT Index 275 291 Acknowledgments We are grateful to a number of friends ...
第 1 頁
... victims and with our limited external view of a closed society to produce a vision of a monolithic and unitary dictatorship whose existence and survival were based on terror . Research evidence available at the time confirmed ...
... victims and with our limited external view of a closed society to produce a vision of a monolithic and unitary dictatorship whose existence and survival were based on terror . Research evidence available at the time confirmed ...
第 2 頁
... victims began to record their experiences in memoirs , and literary accounts of the terror proliferated . Based largely on such sources , interviews with terror victims , and Soviet revelations of the Khrushchev era , Robert Conquest ...
... victims began to record their experiences in memoirs , and literary accounts of the terror proliferated . Based largely on such sources , interviews with terror victims , and Soviet revelations of the Khrushchev era , Robert Conquest ...
第 4 頁
... victims . Some con- tributors tap unexplored or underutilized source materials long available in the West . Others have taken advantage of glasnost ' and the recent opening of Soviet archives and libraries for the years of the terror to ...
... victims . Some con- tributors tap unexplored or underutilized source materials long available in the West . Others have taken advantage of glasnost ' and the recent opening of Soviet archives and libraries for the years of the terror to ...
第 6 頁
... victims of rural repression between 1927 and 1935 range far beyond the much publicized kulak , as previous scholars have long indicated , persecutions were far from random . Indeed , one finds " certain clearly identifiable victims of ...
... victims of rural repression between 1927 and 1935 range far beyond the much publicized kulak , as previous scholars have long indicated , persecutions were far from random . Indeed , one finds " certain clearly identifiable victims of ...
內容
Narkom Ezhov | 21 |
The Politics of Repression Revisited | 40 |
The Second Coming Class Enemies in the Soviet Countryside 19271935 | 65 |
The Omnipresent Conspiracy On Soviet Imagery of Politics and Social Relations in the 1930s | 99 |
The Soviet Economic Crisis of 19361940 and the Great Purges | 116 |
The Stakhanovite Movement The Background to the Great Terror in the Factories 19351938 | 142 |
The Great Terror on the Local Level Purges in Moscow Factories 19361938 | 163 |
The Great Purges in a Rural District Belyi Raion Revisited | 168 |
The Red Army and the Great Purges | 198 |
Stalinist Terror in the Donbas A Note | 215 |
Patterns of repression among the Soviet elite in the late 1930s A biographical approach | 225 |
The Impact of the Great Purges on Soviet Elites A Case Study from Moscow and Leningrad Telephone Directories of the 1930s | 247 |
Victims of Stalinism How Many? | 261 |
More Light on the Scale of Repression and Excess Mortality in the Soviet Union in the 1930s | 275 |
291 | |
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常見字詞
accused administration April Arch Getty archives Argumenty i fakty arrested Belyi Raion Bukharin byvshie liudi cadres Central Committee Plenum charges chistka collective farm collectivization Commissar Commissariat Communist Party Conquest countryside deaths dekulakization Donbas economic elite enemies exile expelled expulsions Ezhovshchina factory famine figures former Gulag Ibid industry Izvestiia TsK KPSS July June Kirov Kollektivizatsiia Kovalev kulaks large numbers leaders Leningrad managers Medvedev military million mortality Moscow Moscow telephone N. I. Ezhov NKTP NKVD obkom oblast officials Old Bolsheviks oppositionists otkhodniki party members peasants Politburo political population Pravda primary party organizations prisoners Purges Raion party organization Red Army Region repression Robert Conquest Roy Medvedev RTsKhIDNI TsPA rural Russian Smolensk social sources Soviet Studies Soviet Union Spisok abonentov SSSR Stakhanovism Stakhanovite movement Stalin Stalinist statistical Table telephone directories telephone subscribers terror Trotskyists Tsaplin TsGANKh USSR victims village vulnerability workers wrecking
熱門章節
第 7 頁 - Guide to the Records of the Smolensk Oblast of the All-Union Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1917-1941, Washington 1980 (Bundesarchiv FA 774).