Stalinism: New DirectionsSheila Fitzpatrick Psychology Press, 2000 - 377 頁 Stalinism is a provocative addition to the current debates related to the history of the Stalinist period of the Soviet Union. Sheila Fitzpatrick has collected together the newest and the most exciting work by young Russian, American and European scholars, as well as some of the seminal articles that have influenced them, in an attempt to reassess this contentious subject in the light of new data and new theoretical approaches. |
內容
Introduction | 1 |
Social Identities | 15 |
Ascribing class the construction of social identity in Soviet Russia | 20 |
Us against them social identity in Soviet Russia 193441 | 47 |
Private and public practices | 71 |
Fashioning the Stalinist soul the diary of Stepan Podlubnyi 193191 | 77 |
Denunciation and its functions in Soviet governance from the archive of the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs 194453 | 117 |
Games of Stalinist democracy ideological discussions in Soviet sciences 194752 | 142 |
Dear comrade you ask what we need socialist paternalism and Soviet rural notables in the mid1930s | 231 |
Varieties of terror | 257 |
The purging of local cliques in the Urals region 19367 | 262 |
Socially harmful elements and the Great Terror | 286 |
Nationality as a status | 309 |
The Soviet Union as a communal apartment or how a socialists state promoted ethnic particularism | 313 |
Modernization or neotraditionalism? Ascribed nationality and Soviet primordialism | 348 |
Further Reading | 368 |