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Stalin

Stalin

SKU: 0009
£9.99Price

We all know Stalin, or at least we think we do. The story of the Georgian student priest who grew up to be one of the 20th century’s most notorious mass-murderers is endlessly fascinating and frequently retold. Yet the man himself remains an enigma, dubbed by some as ‘history’s greatest butcher’ and remembered fondly by others as the visionary leader who defeated Fascism.

 

Drawing on a range of recent histories, Claire Shaw offers a new portrait of the dictator. She argues that Stalin was both the architect and the product of a violent revolutionary moment: only by considering both the man and his era can we begin to understand the horrors, and the problematic legacy, of his decades in power.

  • PRODUCT INFO

    Author: Claire Shaw

    ISBN: 9781911187899

    Number Of Pages: 128

    Publisher: Connell Publishing

    Release Date: 2018-10-18

    EAN: 9781911187899

  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    Claire Shaw graduated in Modern and Medieval Languages (Russian and French) from the Uni- versity of Cambridge in 2005, then moved to the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, Univer- sity College London, to take an MA and PhD in Russian and Soviet history. A lecturer at the University of Bristol, she has written extensively about the Soviet Union.

  • FURTHER INFORMATION - STALIN

    Stalin, to borrow Churchill’s phrase, is “a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma”. There are still heated arguments about how precisely we should judge the Georgian student priest who grew up to be one of the 20th century’s most notorious mass-murderers. This owes much to the enormity of the crimes, as Claire Shaw says in this short but chilling book about the man and the political system that developed under his rule: Stalinism. (Very few political regimes have been personalised in such a way Nazism does not bear the name of Hitler, for example). What visions underpinned his actions? What mechanisms enabled him to commit his crimes? Why did nobody stop him? Within Stalin’s lifetime, Russia and her neighbours endured a series of violent revolutions, two world wars, the forced collectivisation of agriculture, a major industrialisation drive, and the violent cataclysms of the Purges. A vast social experiment was launched radically to remake the nature of human society on the basis of equality and the redistribution of wealth; its implementation resulted in a violent and coercive regime that had little respect for human life or the natural world. But it is too easy to dismiss Stalin simply as a monster. Too easy and wrong. What is most chilling about Stalin, as this book shows, is that he was all too human.

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