THE HOUSE THAT STALIN BUILT. The power structure of the Russian State The “Tsar” The Boyars (chiefs of bureaucracy) The intelligentsia (middle class,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE RISE OF TOTALITARIAN STATES
Advertisements

Holodomor. Historical Outline Russian Empire late to industrialization late to democratic reform citizens lacked rights enjoyed by most Europeans.
TURNING POINT OF THE 20 TH CENTURY. NATIONAL MYTHS AND THE WORLD WAR II EXPERIENCE  Each European nation has its own myths regarding WWII…
Chapter 15 – Revolution in Russia
Revolution & Civil War in Russia. I.The March Revolution brings an end to Tsarism 1917 In 1914, Russia was slow to industrialize. The Tsar and nobles.
Homework Reading about Mussolini Answer all questions DO IT!
The Soviet Union Under Stalin
FROM RUSSIA TO THE USSR FROM RUSSIA TO THE USSR After WWI and the Russian Civil War the country was exhausted They had lost more troops than any.
“ The Thaw ” ( ). Nikita Khrushchev General Secretary of CPSU
RISE OF STALIN.
The Russian Revolution
Stalin and Totalitarianism
LENIN TAKES COMMAND AND STALIN’S REIGN OF TERROR
The Russian Revolution The story of Russia to USSR Readings: Spodek, pp
A Communist Totalitarian Government. Stalin claimed that Russia had suffered due to its economy being “backwards,” focusing on agriculture and not industry.
Lenin to Stalin Mr. Eischen, Mr. Cleveland and Mrs. McCarthy.
WW II: The Rise of Dictators Mr. Macomber Mercedes High School
The Russian Revolution And A Totalitarian State
TURNING POINT OF THE 20 TH CENTURY. NATIONAL MYTHS AND THE WORLD WAR II EXPERIENCE  Each European nation has its own myths regarding WWII…
The Russian Revolution Mr. Bach Accelerated World History.
Background Information on Animal Farm. George Orwell ( ) Pen name of Eric Blair Pen name of Eric Blair Grew up in British India Grew up in British.
Russian Revolution Review Chapter 15 Mr Pubentz Modern Era 3/9/07.
Revolutions in Russia & Totalitarian Russia Chapter 30 Sections 1 & 2.
Russian Revolution Causes for March 1917 Revolution  Czars had reformed too little  Peasants extremely poor  Revolutionaries hatched radical.
A New Era, the revolution continues Ch. 24 section 2.
The Russian Revolution: History progresses in 4 stages: Stage 1: feudalism Stage 2: industrial capitalism– rise of bourgeoisie Stage 3: socialism–
THE HOUSE THAT STALIN BUILT. Kievan Rus First great civilization of the Eastern Slavs. Centred on Kiev and Novgorod on trade routes between Scandinavia.
Animal Farm Background Info Marxism Communist Revolution Soviet Union: Communist State Major Figures GLP English 1 Dr. Newton.
The Cold War Russian Revolution The Rise and Fall of the USSR VocabWWIIWild Card
A Totalitarian State Pages 733 to 738. Stalin in Power Name means “ steel” Stalin becomes dictator after fighting for power with Trotsky Used propaganda.
©2009, TESCCC World History, Unit 10, Lesson 2 The Soviet Union Under Stalin Unit 10: The Rise of Totalitarianism and World War II Lesson 2.
The Cold War, Origins Originally centered around Europe, especially concerning the fate of Germany (which was split into four zones of occupation.
Soviet Union Under Stalin
Reading: Page 11 Worksheet 5
The Russian Revolution pt II Lecture From Lenin to Stalin Lecture Notes.
Roots of the Revolution Geography of Russia: –Huge-hard to control all –Population/Ethnic groups –Climate-affects economy Food shortages: –Suffered back.
Renamed Russia the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR): Soviets or revolutionary councils now held power. Before this, Russian Leader was Vladimir.
Unit 10 Part 2 From Lenin to Stalin. Post Civil War USSR 1920: Lenin turns his attention to governing The Soviet Union 1920: Lenin turns his attention.
Stalin and Totalitarianism
Brief Review of Russian Revolution 1917 – Russian Revolution begins and Czar Nicholas II abdicates his throne –A provisional government is set up (Kerensky.
Stalin.
Friday 4/4/14 RAP 1.What was the NEP? Who started it? 2.What was the Five Year Plan? Who started it? 3.Which leader, Lenin or Stalin, do you think was.
Tsar Nicholas II heads an absolute monarchy that continues to resist the dilution of its power, which for the first time legalize political parties and.
Russian Dictatorships Joseph Stalin Stalin’s accession to power Key to rise to power was his post as General Secretary of the Communist Party.
The Soviet Empire.
The Russian Revolution How the USSR was created..
Do Now: “Stalin” – Russian word for ‘Man of Steel’ -Why would someone change their name to Stalin?
Stalin’s Dictatorship Sara Slusher. Stalin Gains Power A power struggle among communist leaders, the chief contesters being Trotsky and Joseph Stalin.
Russian Revolution and Russia under Stalin. Warm Up: What is Revolution? Left PageCopy the Timeline on Pages Right PageRead the scenarios on page.
The Soviet Union Under Stalin Chapter 13 Section 4.
H-SS 10.7 Students analyze the rise of totalitarian governments after World War I.
LENIN AND STALIN AP European History Unit 10. Soviet Union A. Russia under LeninComintern founded in 1919.
9.2 Notes: Part III Objective: Describe how Lenin and Stalin create a totalitarian Russia.
9.2 Notes: Part III Objective: Describe how Lenin and Stalin create a totalitarian Russia.
Russia II The Russian Revolution A New Era in the USSR.
The Russian Revolution Two revolutions occurred in 1917 The 1 st in March was unplanned where angry mobs protested “Bread & Peace!” A week after riots.
From World War to Cold War
23 May Final is a week from Tuesday Briefly discuss 32.5
Eastern Europe and Russia
Stalin and Totalitarianism
What impact did Vladimir Lenin have on Russia?
Iosif Vissarionovich Stalin “Joseph Stalin”
Rise of Dictatorships The Soviet Union.
Aim: To what extent does achievement outweigh the cost?
Unit II: Challenges & Changes
Warm Up # 34 What conditions would need to exist for Communist Ideas to become popular and possibly spark revolution?
Warm Up # 33 What conditions would need to exist for Communist Ideas to become popular and possibly spark revolution?
Warm Up # 34 What conditions would need to exist for Communist Ideas to become popular and possibly spark revolution?
Warm Up # 26 What conditions would need to exist for Communist Ideas to become popular and possibly spark revolution?
Joseph Stalin Comes to power after the death of Lenin
Presentation transcript:

THE HOUSE THAT STALIN BUILT

The power structure of the Russian State The “Tsar” The Boyars (chiefs of bureaucracy) The intelligentsia (middle class, small layer) The Narod (Common People)

The Origin of the Soviet Union First World War: Russia fights against Germany and Austria. Russia becomes exhausted, the last Emperor Nicholas II abdicates. Lenin’s Bolshevik party overthrows the provisional government on 25th October / 7 th November 1917.

Vladimir Lenin ( )

What was Bolshevism? 1903 Lenin splits the Socialist movement: instead of working through parliamentary means (menshevism or Social Democracy), he advocates a dictatorship of the proletariat. The Russian revolution was the first proletarian revolution. The Bolshevik party renamed Communist. Lenin unleashes terror in the name of class warfare. In 1921, with the Civil War over, Lenin announces the New Economic Plan, allows small business to thrive.

The Soviet Empire? USSR occupies most of territory of the former Russian Empire. Exceptions: Finland, Poland, Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) which become independent in 1918 (and were reabsorbed after 1945) Lenin dies, Georgian Bolshevik Josef Stalin consolidates power.

Josef Stalin ( )

What was Stalinism? 1920s saw rise of Fascism in Germany, Italy: war inevitable to defend the only communist country Socialism in one country meant building a powerful industrial state 1928 First Five-Year Plan to raise production. Millions arrested, used as slave labour in construction Electrification of the country: dams and canals

Collectivization of Agriculture Decision to sell grain abroad to purchase industrial equipment Peasants forced into collectives, contributing their own livestock, land, equipment Industrialization of agriculture: tractors and combines Partly class war against peasants

“Holodomor” In 1933 the crops fail, Soviets confiscate grain Millions die of starvation in the villages, especially in Ukraine Was it genocide by Russians against Ukrainians?

“Collectivization” of agriculture Theory: increased output possible due to concentration, mechanization Doubtful results: eradication of peasants’ motivation Millions of people are starved to death when land and food is confiscated Soviet agriculture permanently disabled

Industrialization Introduction of ambitious 5-year plans: Successful development of heavy industry. Tractors, trucks, planes, Moscow metro Soviet Union becomes a sophisticated industrial power Massive exploitation of prisoners’ work. Labour camps. Stalin’s utopian projects: White (Belomor) Sea Canal

PURGES: THE GREAT TERROR Elimination of political rivals: murder of Sergei Kirov (1934) show trials of fellow Bolsheviks the Great Terror (peak in 1937) Millions arrested, shipped to Siberia, worked to death in the GULAG camps

Gulags: Labour camps Official police data. Reported to Stalin by Minister Kruglov. Source: Ahlberg 1992

Why the Terror? Stalin falsified history to eliminate Trotsky from the history books Wrote his own History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union exaggerating his own role Feared a coup d’état and his own replacement by Trotsky, in exile in various countries Trotsky finally murdered in Mexico City by a Soviet agent in 1940

Socialist Realism Term invented in 1932 to set Soviet policy on literature as the central art-form. Promulgated at the first Congress of Union of Soviet Writers (1934) by Zhdanov. Objective: to control literature and make it serve Stalin’s objective of Socialism in one country. To replace ambiguous (hence dangerous) avant-garde art forms with more traditional ones.

The Cultural Program Zhdanov’s assignment: develop model of organization for all the arts. Use the creation of artists’ unions to reward and control: dachas and royalties for the compliant; poverty and eventual arrest for the uncooperative. Literature model later applied to film, visual arts, music, even architecture.

“Ever Higher” (Serafima Riangina, 1934)

Voloshyn, Reconstruction of Dnieper Hydro Plant, 1947

The Worker and the Collective Farmer (Рабочий и Колхозница) Vera Mukhina Created for the 1937 International Exhibition in Paris; re-erected in the Exhibition of Economic Achievements, Moscow; Recently restored

“Stalin as an organizer of the October Revolution” by Karp Trokhimenko

“Roses for Stalin” Boris Vladimirsky

Socialist Realism: Meaning? Formula worked out by Maxim Gorky: Literature must be realistic (i.e., believable). Appeal to the newly literate masses of workers and peasants. “Party-minded” (Marxist-Leninist) Optimistic – apotheosis at end.

“Sotsrealism” in literature “Bildungsroman” – about the education of an individual with whom the reader is supposed to identify. “young positive hero”of correct class background, i.e., son of worker, overcomes difficulties thanks to help of older Bolshevik, perhaps party member, triumphs over difficulties at the end and has his consciousness raised.

Socialist Realist FilmLiubov Orlova in film Circus.Liubov Orlova in film Circus

The Prelude to War Molotov-Ribbentrop pact 23 August Germany and USSR: secret protocols divide Eastern Europe into “spheres of interest.” USSR granted Eastern Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland and Bessarabia (Moldavia).

Execution of Polish Officers In 1939 some 20,000 Polish officers surrendered to Soviets In 1940 Stalin gives the order for them to be executed Why? – they pose a risk in case of invasion; they represent a hostile force Falsification of history: Soviets claim they were murdered by the Germans

THE SECOND WORLD WAR (THE GREAT PATRIOTIC WAR) June 22, 1941 Germany invades USSR. Defence of Moscow and Leningrad July February 1943 the Battle of Stalingrad “Generals win battles, economies win wars.”

Victory! In 1945 USSR is superpower. Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, part of Poland, Moldavia all absorbed into USSR. German city Königsberg (Kaliningrad) becomes Soviet.

The Cold War “Soviet bloc” of occupied countries is formed: East Germany (GDR), Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria. Winston Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech (Fulton, Missouri, 1946

“Personality Cult” Stalin as an Icon Religious-style indoctrination Forged history Stalin = Motherland People cried when he died Denounced by Nikita Khrushchev on 25 February1956 at 20 th Communist Party congress. Most popular leader in Russia today