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Brenton T. Was Revolution Inevitable? Turning Points of the Russian Revolution

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Brenton T. Was Revolution Inevitable? Turning Points of the Russian Revolution
Oxford University Press, 2017. — 364 p. — ISBN 978–0–19–065891–5.
Communism's rise and eventual fall in Eastern Europe is one of the great stories of the 20th century. Within this context, the Russian Revolution's role and legacy overshadows all else. In Was Revolution Inevitable?, former British Ambassador to Russia Sir Tony Brenton has gathered essays by leading historians to trace the events that led to the overthrow of the Tsarist regime and to pinpoint moments when those events could have unfolded in a drastically different way. What would the world be like had Fanny Kaplan succeeded in assassinating Vladimir Lenin in 1918? What if the Bolsheviks had never imposed the brutal "War Communism" initiatives that devastated the Russian peasants? What if Rasputin had talked Nicholas II out of involvement in World War One, which effectively led to the Revolution and sealed the demise of the Romanov dynasty?
Preeminent scholars, including Orlando Figes, Richard Pipes, Douglas Smith, and Martin Sixsmith, ruminate on these questions and many others, assembling a series of pivotal moments that reveal what might have gone differently, and, if so, what the repercussions would have been. The contributors take a variety of approaches, from imagining an alternate history, to carefully studying a precarious moment of contingency, to disproving popular imagined alternatives. All of the chapters, however, shed light on Lenin's rise to power and the proliferation of his agenda, while assessing the influence of the revolution's pivotal moments on Russian-and global-politics.
Provocative and illuminating, Was Revolution Inevitable? provides an in-depth exploration of the conflict that for nearly a century has shaped world history. The Russian Revolution put totalitarian communism into power, fueled Nazism and the Second World War, and forged one of the West's greatest antagonists. Here is a book that scrutinizes how the past, present, and future of global history could have been remarkably different had the events of 1917 unfolded differently and in the process deepens our understanding of what did happen and why.
Introduction (Tony Brenton).
1900–1920. Foreign intervention: The long view (Dominic Lieven).
September 1911. The assassination of Stolypin (Simon Dixon).
June 1914. Grigory Rasputin and the outbreak of the First World War (Douglas Smith).
March 1917. The last Tsar (Donald Crawford).
April–July 1917. Enter Lenin (Sean McMeekin).
August 1917. The Kornilov affair: A tragedy of errors (Richard Pipes).
October 1917. The ‘harmless drunk’: Lenin and the October insurrection (Orlando Figes).
January 1918. The short life and early death of Russian democracy: The Duma and the Constituent Assembly (Tony Brenton).
July 1918. Rescuing the Tsar and his family (Edvard Radzinsky).
August 1918. Fanny Kaplan’s attempt to kill Lenin (Martin Sixsmith).
November 1918. Sea change in the Civil War (Evan Mawdsley).
March 1920. The fate of the Soviet countryside (Erik C. Landis).
February 1922. The ‘Bolshevik Reformation’ (Catriona Kelly).
1917–1922. The rise of Leninism: The death of political pluralism in the post-revolutionary Bolshevik party (Richard Sakwa).
Afterword. Lenin and yesterday’s utopia (Tony Brenton).
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