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The Soviet Experiment, 1917-1927 History 408 / October 23, 2012
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V. I. Lenin (1870-1924)
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“Dual Power” I: the Provisional Government Alexander Kerensky (1881-1970)
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Summer 1917: Kerensky rallies the army to a new offensive
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Demonstration in St. Petersburg against the war
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“Dual Power” II: Soviets (Councils) of workers, soldiers, and peasants
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Lenin after his return from Switzerland to St. Petersburg (1917)
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The Putilov Works: a stronghold of Bolshevik support
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The Winter Palace in St. Petersburg
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Bolsheviks storm the Winter Palace, October 24-25, 1917 (November 7 by Western calendars)
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Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)
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Civil War: “Red” soldiers strung up by “White” officers
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Civil War: recruiting Red Army volunteers (lower right – “are you with us or with them?”)
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Civil War: teaching economics to future party members
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Allied forces intervene in the Civil War (shown here in Vladivostok)
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A sarcastic Bolshevik view of the League of Nations “Capitalists of all countries, unite!”
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1924 pamphlet outlining Lenin’s views on the “New Economic Policy” (introduced 1921)
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The harvest of NEP: Farmers’ collectives increase the urban food supply
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“NEPmen” profit from semi-capitalist markets
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The Comintern (founded 1919): Trotsky’s program for global revolution
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Cutting-edge artists support state goals: (a) education and (b) the “construction of socialism”
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Lenin: Communism = Soviet power + Electrification”
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“Are you helping to liquidate illiteracy?” (1925)
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“Radio: Out of a million wills, we will create one will” (1925)
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Social experimentation: Alexandra Kollontai and the “Zhenotdel” (Women’s Section of the Bolshevik Party, 1918-1930; Kollontai dismissed in 1922)
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“Every cook should learn to run the government. – Lenin” “Don’t sit at home in your kitchen, head to the elections for the Soviet! Once working women remained in the dark, but now in the Soviet they decide things”
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Constructivist architecture of the 1920s
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More constructivism (architecture & photography)
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Experimental film-making: Dziga Vertov, Man With a Movie Camera (1929)Man With a Movie Camera
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Joseph Stalin (1879-1953)
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Stalin claims to be Lenin’s chosen successor
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Mobilizing social envy in the countryside: poor and middling peasants aroused against the “kulaks”
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