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Kronstadt 1917–1921
The Fate of a Soviet Democracy
The first major study of revolutionary Kronstadt to span the period from February 1917 to the uprising of 1921.
Israel Getzler (Author)
9780521894425, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 16 May 2002
312 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.8 cm, 0.4 kg
This is the first major study of revolutionary Kronstadt to span the period from February 1917 to the uprising of March 1921. It focuses attention on Kronstadt's forgotten golden age, between March 1917 and July 1918, when Soviet power and democracy flourished there. Professor Getzler argues that the Kronstadters' 'Third Revolution' of March 1921 was a desperate attempt at a restoration of that Soviet democracy which they believed had been taken from them by Bolshevik 'commissarocracy'. Pointing to continuity in personnel, ideology and institutions linking the 1917–18 Kronstadt experiment in Soviet democracy with the March 1921 uprising, the author sees that continuity reflected in the Kronstadt tragedy's central figure, the long-haired, dreamy-eyed student Anatolii Lamanov. Chairman of the Kronstadt Soviet in 1917 and chief editor of its Izvestiia, Lamanov became the ideologist of the 1921 uprising and was soon after executed as a 'counter-revolutionary'.
Preface
Acknowledgements
Note on transliteration
1. A sailors' Sakhalin
2. The February revolution in Kronstadt
3. The Kronstadt Republic
4. The July days
5. All power to soviets
6. Kronstadt's third revolution
7. Pride and glory of the Russian revolution?
Notes
Index.
Subject Areas: General & world history [HBG]