Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Americans who visited the young Soviet republic during the first dozen or so years of its existence were astonished at the degree of interest, fascination, respect, and even liking that their hosts displayed for them and the United States. “Ours is the only important Government which refuses to grant Russia political recognition,” one of them wrote, “and yet it is our country that Russia emulates and admires.” Another reported that “the word for industrialization is Americanization, and the passion to Ford-ize the Soviet Union is even stronger than the passion to communize it.”
This study is part of a project which was generously supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Philosophical Society.
1 The first Maiakovskii quotation is from his “Ran‘she: Teper’,” the second from “Amerikantsy udivliaiutsia.” They appear in Maiakovskii, Vladimi, Polnoe sobranie sochinenii (Moscow, 1955–1958), II, 98,Google Scholar and X, 89-90, respectively. Translation of the first is by the author. The translation of the second is by Guerney, B. G. and is taken from his An Anthology of Russian Literature (New York, 1960), 40.Google Scholar
2 Kaltenborn, H. V., We Look at the World (New York, 1930), 117Google Scholar; McCormick, Anne O'Hare, The Hammer and the Sickle (New York, 1928), 26.Google Scholar Other examples are to be found in Barghoorn, Frederick C., The Soviet Image of the United States (New York, 1950), 28–33Google Scholar; Lyons, Eugene, Assignment in Utopia (New York, 1937)Google Scholar; Strong, Anna Louise, The First Time in History (New York, 1924)Google Scholar; Thompson, Dorothy, The New Russia (New York, 1928).Google Scholar
3 Hindus, Maurice, Humanity Uprooted (New York, 1929), 355–69Google Scholar; idem.Broken Earth (New York, 1931), 29, 107, 106Google ScholarPubMed; Duranty, Walter, “Talk of Ford Favors Thrills Moscow,” New York Times, 17 02 1928, p. 7Google Scholar; idem, Duranty Reports (New York, 1934), 19, 246Google Scholar; Dreiser, Theodore, Dreiser Looks at Russia (New York, 1928), 76, 52.Google Scholar
4 Dreiser, , Dreiser Looks at RussiaGoogle Scholar; Hindus, , Humanity Uprooted, 355Google Scholar. Henry Ford's 1922 autobiography, My Life and Work (translated as Moia zhizn', moi dostizheniia), had four Russian editions in 1924 alone; an eighth appeared in Leningrad in 1927. His Today and Tomorrow, published in 1926, had at least three Russian editions. The third, published in Leningrad in 1928 under the title Segodnia i zavtra, carried a preface by D. I. Zaslavskii which was designed to counter the infatuation with Ford of which the book at hand was an example. Also see Ledenev, S. G., Preface, Za stankom u Forda (Moscow, 1927)Google Scholar; and Ermanskii, O. E., Legenda o Forde (n.p., n.d.).Google Scholar For other warnings against the excesses of Americanism, see note 74 below.
5 Pogodin, N. F., Temp (1929),Google Scholar in Sobranie dramaticheskikh proizvedenii (Moscow, 1960), I, 27–102.Google Scholar Quotations: I, 46, 77–78. The engineer in the play was patterned after the American engineer John Calder. See the article by Kendall E. Bailes in this issue.
6 II'ia Ehrenburg's Trest D.E. was originally published in Russian in Berlin in 1923. The novel 10 L.S. was written in 1929 and first appeared in the Soviet Union in the journal Krasnaia Nov' in September and October of that year. Soviet editions of Ehrenburg's works accessible to me do not contain the passages cited. They are taken from German versions of the two novels; Trust D.E. (Berlin, 1925), 94Google ScholarPubMed; Das Leben der Autos (Berlin, 1930), 262–75.Google Scholar
7 Lenin, V. I., Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, 5th ed., (Moscow, 1958–1965), XXXIV, 198Google Scholar; idem, Leninskii sbornik (Moscow, 1959), XXXVI, 37–38Google Scholar; Bukharin, N. I., Proletarskaia revoliutsiia i kul'tura (Petrograd, 1923), 48.Google Scholar
8 Stalin, I. V., Sochineniia (Moscow, 1947), VI, 186–88Google Scholar; idem, Problems of Leninism (Moscow, 1954), 109–111.Google ScholarPubMed
9 Stalin, , Problems of Leninism, 111Google Scholar; Sochineniia, idem, VI, 188.
10 Trotskii, L. D., “K voprosu o perspektivakh mirovogo razvitiia,” Izvestiia, 5 08 1924, pp. 3–4.Google Scholar
11 Erro, Imogen, “‘Catching Up and Outstripping’: An Appraisal,” Problems of Communism, 10:3 (05–06 1961), 24–25Google Scholar; Schwartz, Morton, The Foreign Policy of the USSR: Domestic Factors (Encino, California, 1975), 84–85.Google Scholar
12 I have given a very brief review of Russian attitudes towards the United States in “America in the Russian Mind—or Russian Discoveries of America,” Pacific Historical Review, 47:1 (02 1978), 27–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and a lengthier one, with a focus on the middle third of the nineteenth century and the American Civil War, in “Russia,” in Heard Round the World, Hyman, Harold, ed. (New York, 1969), 172–256.Google Scholar The following deal with the question of perceptions and/or influences in a variety of ways, but do not examine “Americanism” and its use as an ideology of industrialization: Boden, Dieter, Das Amerikabild im russischen Schrifttum bis zum Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts (Hamburg, 1968)Google Scholar; Hecht, David, Russian Radicals Look to America (Cambridge, Mass., 1947)Google Scholar; Laserson, Max M., The American Impact on Russia, 1784–1917: Diplomatic and Ideological (New York, 1962).Google Scholar The fact that America is not mentioned at all in Treadgold's, Donald W.The West in Russia and China, Vol. I of Russia, 1472–1917 (Cambridge, 1973),Google Scholar is a more accurate reflection of the extent of American influence on Russian thought than the claims made by Laserson, and it points up at the same time that the aspect of the Western presence with which I am concerned has not been studied.
13 Gerschenkron, Alexander, “Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective,” in The Progress of Underdeveloped Areas, Hoselitz, B. F., ed. (Chicago, 1952), 3–39. Quotations: 23, 25.Google Scholar
14 Gerschenkron, , “Economic Backwardness”;Google Scholaridem, “Problems and Patterns of Russian Economic Development,” in The Transformation of Russian Society, Black, Cyril, ed. (Cambridge, Mass., 1960), 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15 See Kindersley, Richard, The First Russian Revisionists (Oxford, 1962), 29–67.Google Scholar Cf. Pipes, Richard, Struve. Liberal on the Left, 1870–1905 (Cambridge, Mass., 1970), 52–64, 111–13Google Scholar; Mendel, Arthur P., Dilemmas of Progress in Tsarist Russia (Cambridge, Mass., 1961), 139ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
16 Dostoevskii, F. M., Polnoe sobranie sochinenii v tridtsati tomakh (Leningrad, 1972- ), XI, 233Google Scholar; Hecht, David, “Mikhailovskij and the United States,” Harvard Slavic Studies, 4 (1957), 268Google Scholar; Markov, Vladimir, Russian Futurism (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1968), 185.Google Scholar
17 Haywood, R. M., The Beginnings of Railway Development in Russia in the Reign of Nicholas I, 1835–1852 (Durham, N.C., 1969), 177.Google Scholar
18 Savich, O. and Ehrenburg, I., My i oni: Frantsiia (Berlin, 1931)Google Scholar; Reutern, M. Kh., “Vliianie ekonomicheskago kharaktera naroda na obrazovanie kapitalov,” Morskoi sbornik, 46:5 (04 1860), 59.Google Scholar
19 The poet Alexander Pushkin, writing in 1834, provided an early example of the horror English industrialism could inspire: “Read the complaints of the English factory workers; your hair will stand on end. How much repulsive oppression, incomprehensible sufferings! What cold barbarism on the one hand, and what appalling poverty on the other. You will think that we are speaking of the construction of the Egyptian pyramids, of Jews working under Egyptian lashes. Not at all: We are talking about the textiles of Mr. Smith or the needles of Mr. Jackson. And note that all this are not abuses, not crimes, but occurrences which take place within the strict limits of legality. It seems there is no creature in the world more unfortunate than the English worker.” Pushkin, A. S., Polnoe sobranie sochinenii v desiati tomakh (Moscow-Leningrad, 1949), VII, 289–90Google Scholar, as cited in Pipes, Richard, Russia under the Old Regime (London, 1974), 149.Google Scholar
20 Lopukhin, A. P., Zhizn' za okeanom (Saint Petersburg, 1882), 397Google Scholar; Ogorodnikov, P. I., V strane svobody (Saint Petersburg, 1882), pt. II, 257Google Scholar; Vasil'chikov, A. I., O samoupravlenii (Saint Petersburg, 1872), I, 336.Google Scholar
21 Fisher, R. B., “American Investment in Pre-Soviet Russia,” American Slavic and East European Review, 8:2 (02 1949), 90–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gulishambarov, S. O., Sravnitel'naia statislika Rossii v mirovom khoziaistve… 1881–1894 (Saint Petersburg, 1905), 60–62, 68,Google ScholarKirchner, Walther, Studies in Russian-American Commerce (Leiden, 1975), 55, 139, 224Google Scholar; Kohlenberg, Gilbert C., “Russian-American Economic Relations, 1905–1917” (Ph.D. diss., University of Illinois, 1951).Google Scholar
22 Cited in Boden, , Amerikabild, 46Google Scholar. Cf. Bolkhovitinov's, N. N.Rossiia i voina SShA za nezavisimost' (Moscow, 1976), 105–131Google Scholar and his Stanovlenie russko-amerikanskikh otnoshenii (Moscow, 1966), 240ff.Google Scholar For a popular biography by an author who also wrote on Fulton, see Abramov, la. V., Veniamin Franklin i ego vremia (Saint Petersburg, 1891).Google Scholar
23 P. P. Svin'in published four articles about the United States between 1814 and 1829, and two editions of a book which reproduced the contents of the first two articles: Opyt zhivopisnago puteshestviia po Severnoi Amerike (Saint Petersburg, 1815, 1818), 81–108.Google Scholar References here are to an English version prepared by Yarmolinsky, Avrahm, Picturesque United States of America, 1811, 1812, 1813: Being a Memoir on Paul Svinin (New York, 1930), 7–10, 14–16.Google Scholar Cf. Boden, , Amerikabild, 53–72Google Scholar, and Kiparsky, Valentin, English and American Characters in Russian Fiction (Berlin, 1964), 134.Google Scholar
24 Virginskii, V. S., Robert Ful'ton (Moscow, 1965), 209, 214–51Google Scholar; Bolkhovitinov, , Stanovlenie, 564.Google Scholar
25 Poletika, P. I., A Sketch of the Internal Conditions of the United States of America and of Their Political Relations with Europe, by a Russian. Translated from the French by an American, withNotes (Baltimore, 1826), 11, 136.Google Scholar Poletika (p. 71) intended his book for a Russian audience, but only excerpts appeared in Russia in 1825 and 1830. See Boden, , Amerikabild, 75–77Google Scholar; Bolkhovitinov, , Stanovlenie, 587–590.Google Scholar
26 Blackwell, William L., The Beginnings of Russian Industrialization (Princeton, 1968), 280–315Google Scholar; Dvoichenko-Markov, Eufrosina, “Americans in the Crimean War,” Russian Review, 13:2 (04 1954), 137–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Parry, Albert, Whistler's Father (Indianapolis-New York, 1939), 145–60Google Scholar; Saul, Norman, “Beverly C. Sanders and the Expansion of Russian-American Trade, 1853–1855,” Maryland Historical Magazine, 67:2 (Summer 1972), 156–71Google Scholar; Tarsaidze, Alexandre, Czars and Presidents (New York, 1958), 119ff.Google Scholar; idem, “Berdanka,” Russian Review, 9:1 (01 1950), 31–32Google Scholar; Dallas, Susan, ed., The Dairy of George Mifflin Dallas (Philadelphia, 1892), 11.Google Scholar
27 Yarmolinsky, Avrahm, Turgenev (New York, 1959), 267, 331Google Scholar; Collins, Perry McDonough, Siberian Journey (Madison, Wisconsin, 1962), 87, 276, 297Google Scholar; Jensen, Ronald, “The Alaska Purchase and Russian-American Relations” (Ph.D. diss., Indiana University, 1971), 34–36Google Scholar; Parry, Albert, “Cassius Clay's Glimpse into the Future,” Russian Review, 2:2 (Spring 1943), 54–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Robertson, James R., A Kentuckian at the Court of the Tsars (Berea, Ky., 1935), 217–23.Google Scholar
28 Bodisko, V. K., “Iz Ameriki,” Sovremennik, no. 3 (03 1856), 114–40Google Scholar; ibid., no. 4 (April 1856), 237–58. Quotations: no. 4, 249–51.
29 Seymour, Thomas Hart, Dispatch No. 7 of 19 August 1854.Google Scholar National Archives, Washington, D.C., Dispatches from U.S. Ministers to Russia, 1808–1906, Micro-copy no. M-35, Roll no. 16.
30 Lakier, A. B., Puteshestvie po Severo-Amerikanskim Shtatam, Kanade i ostrovu Kube, 2 vols. (Saint Petersburg, 1859), II, 399.Google Scholar Parts of the book first appeared as articles. A one-volume English translation is now available: Schrier, Arnold and Story, Joyce, A Russian Looks at America. The Journey of Aleksandr Borisovich Lakier in 1857 (Chicago, 1979).Google Scholar
31 Lakier, , Puteshestvie, I, 7–12, 120, 191–93, 231–38, 263; II, 371.Google Scholar
32 Ibid., 11,121.
33 Ibid., 11,153, 140; I, 245–47.
34 Golovachov, A., “Sovremennaia letopis',” Russkii vestnik, 26:3 (03 1860), 129Google Scholar; Ushinskii, K. D., Sobranie pedagogicheskikh sochinenii (Saint Petersburg, 1875)Google Scholar contains two articles on American education first published in 1858; Chadwick, James R., “The Study and Practice of Medicine by Women,” International Review (10 1879), 451.Google Scholar I am grateful to Jeanette E. Tuve for supplying the latter reference.
35 Armytage, W. H. G., The Rise of the Technocrats (London and Toronto, 1965), 161.Google Scholar On Reutern, see his own “Vliianie ekonomicheskago,” 59–66Google Scholar; and Kipp, Jacob W., “M. Kh. Reutern on the Russian State and Economy,” Journal of Modern History, 47:3 (09 1975), 437–59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarBunge, N. Kh., “Politiko-ekonomicheskoe obozrenie 1855–1857 godov,” Otechestvennye zapiski, 117:4 (04 1858), 371–408.Google ScholarSolov'eva, A. M., Zheleznodorozhnyi transport vo vtoroi polovine XIX veka (Moscow, 1975), 88–89.Google Scholar For Khilkov, see Laserson, , American Impact on Russia, 471Google Scholar; and von Laue, Theodor, Sergei Wine and the Industrialization of Russia (New York, 1963), 79.Google Scholar
36 Gaurovits, I. V., Voenno-sanitarnye uchrezhdeniia Severo-Amerikanskikh Soedinennykh Shtatov vo vremia poslednei voiny (Saint Petersburg, 1868), 134–39.Google Scholar
37 Druzhinin, A. V., Sobranie Sochinenii (Saint Petersburg, 1865), V, 609.Google Scholar
38 “Novye knigi,” Delo, No. 6 (06 1873), 27Google Scholar; Hecht, , Russian Radicals, 152Google Scholar; Dostoevskii, F. M., Pis'ma (Moscow-Leningrad, 1930), II, 299–300.Google Scholar
39 Ogorodnikov, , V strane svobody, passim.Google Scholar An earlier edition, Ol N'ui-Iorka do San Frantsisko i obratno v Rossii (Saint Petersburg, 1872),Google Scholar has not been available to me.
40 Nikitenko, A. V., Dnevnik (Moscow, 1955–1956), III, 144–45Google Scholar; anon., Russland, von einem Russen (Leipzig, 1871), 88–90.Google Scholar
41 A graduate in mathematics of Moscow University, E. R. Tsimmerman made his first American trip in 1857–58, a second in 1869–70, and a third in 1884. He published numerous articles on his travels, two books, and a study of American agriculture: Puteshestvie po Amerike v 1869–1870 g. (Moscow, 1872)Google Scholar; Soedinennye Shtaty Severnoi Ameriki; iz puteshestvii 1857–58 i 1869–70 godov (Moscow, 1873)Google Scholar; Ocherki amerikanskogo sel's-kogo khoziaistva (Moscow, 1897).Google Scholar
42 Idem, Puteshestvie, 277–78.Google Scholar
43 Idem, Soedinennye Shtaty, I, 177.Google Scholar
44 Idem, Puteshestvie, 79–80,Google Scholar 422. Cf. Soedinennye Shtaty, I, 62–63, 127, 171, 180.Google Scholar
45 Idem, “Votchinny zakon v Amerike i nashi stepi,” Otechestvennye zapiski, 234:9 (09 1877), 109–66.Google Scholar
46 Ibid., 129.
47 Tsimmerman, E. R., “Ot Tikhago okeana do Atlanticheskago,” Russkaia Mysl', no. 3 (03 1885), 223Google Scholar; idem, Ocherki, 116–20.Google Scholar
48 Beveridge, Albert J., The Russian Advance (New York, 1904), 430.Google Scholar
49 A one-volume selection of Mendeleev's writings, Problemy ekonomicheskogo razvitiia Rossii (Moscow, 1960)Google Scholar, includes the speech, but it omits the appeal to the tsar, which I have taken from Berlin, P. A., Russkaia burzhuaziia v staroe i novoe vremia (Moscow, 1922), 123,Google Scholar quoting from an earlier text.
50 Mendeleev, D. I., Neftianaia promyshlennost' v Severo-Amerikanskom Shtate Pensilvanii i na Kavkaze (Saint Petersburg, 1877), xiii-xiv, 62ff.Google Scholar; idem, Raboty po sel'skomu khoziaistvu i lesovodstvu (Moscow, 1954), 541Google Scholar; idem, Sochineniia (Leningrad, 1937–1952), XX, 501.Google Scholar
51 Tverskoi, P. A., Ocherki Servero-Amerikanskikh Soedinennykh Shtatov (Saint Petersburg, 1895).Google Scholar The book was first serialized in the monthly Vestnik Evropy for which Tverskoi continued to report on American affairs in later years. Maksim Gorkii, who was familiar with Tverskoi's articles, said of him, “What idiots all these Tverskiis and similar Russian writers about America are!” Rougle, Charles, Three Russians Consider America (Stockholm, 1977), 25.Google Scholar
52 Ianzhul, I. I., Vospominaniia (Saint Petersburg, 1910–1911), II, 126.Google Scholar
53 Ibid., 12–17, 120–153; idem, Promyslovye sindikaty… v Soedinennykh Shtatakh Severnoi Ameriki (Saint Petersburg, 1895)Google Scholar; idem, Mezhdu delom (Saint Petersburg, 1904), 1–21, 99–106, 162–92, 420–26Google Scholar; idem, Chasy Dosuga (Moscow, 1896), 227–374Google Scholar; idem, Vpoiskakh luchshago budushchago (Saint Petersburg, 1893), 232–56, 339–42Google Scholar; Ianzhul, Ekaterina, Amerikanskaia shkola (Saint Petersburg, 1902, 1904).Google Scholar
54 lanzhul, Ekaterina, Ekonomicheskaia otsenka narodnago obrazovaniia (Saint Petersburg, 1899), 83.Google Scholar
55 Kareisha, S. D., Severo-amerikanskie zheleznyiia dorogi (Saint Petersburg, 1896)Google Scholar; Kirpichev, V. L., Otchet o komandirovke direktora Khar' kovskago tekhnologicheskago instituta Kirpicheva v Severnuiu Ameriku (Saint Petersburg, 1895)Google Scholar; Gulishambarov, S. I., Neftianaia promyshlennost' Soedinennykh Shtatov Severnoi Ameriki v sviazi s obshchim promyshlennym razvitiem slrany (Saint Petersburg, 1894)Google Scholar; Konovalov, D. P., Promyshlennost' Soedinennykh Shtatov Severnoi Ameriki i sovremennye priemy khimicheskoi tekhnologii (Saint Petersburg, 1895);Google ScholarKovalevskii, E. P. et al. , Narodnoe obrazovanie v Soedinennykh Shtatakh Severnoi Ameriki (Saint Petersburg, 1895)Google Scholar; Nedumov, A. I., V Novyi svet; putevyia zametki (Warsaw, 1894)Google Scholar; Vitkovskii, V. V., Za okean: putevyia zapiski (Saint Petersburg, 1894)Google Scholar; Sidorov, Vasilii, Amerika (Saint Petersburg, 1895)Google Scholar; Sviatlovskii, V. V., Po belu svetu; za Atlantichesko okeanom (Ekaterinoslav, 1898)Google Scholar; Korolenko, V. G., Puteshestvie v Ameriku (Moscow, 1923).Google Scholar
56 Volkonskii, S. M., Moi vospominaniia (Munich, 1923), II, 271Google Scholar; Nedumov, , V Novyi svet, 12–22; 57–58.Google Scholar For predictions that America was fated to go the way of all capitalist countries, see, for example, Iuzhakov, S. N., “Voprosy ekonomicheskago razvitiia Rossii,” Russkoe bogatstvo, no. 12 (1893), 186–209Google Scholar; here 189.
57 Ozerov, I. Kh., Itogi ekonomicheskago razvitiia XIX veka (Saint Petersburg, 1902), 74ff.Google Scholar A second edition appeared under the title Kuda my idem (Saint Petersburg, 1911).Google Scholar
58 Idem, Otchego Amerika idet tak bystro vpered? (Moscow, 1903).Google Scholar Also see Ozerov's lz zhizni truda (Moscow, 1904), 269–93;Google ScholarNa temy dnia (Moscow, 1912), 44–57Google Scholar; and his preface to the Russian translation of Sombart's, WernerDie Juden und das Wirtschaftsleben: Evrei i khoziaistvennaia zhizn' (Saint Petersburg, 1912).Google Scholar
59 Chemu uchit nas Amerika? was based on a series of lectures Ozerov gave in the Moscow Historical Museum. They first appeared in Russkoe ekonomicheskoe obozrenie, nos. 4, 5 (1903)Google Scholar, and as a book that same year. A second edition was published in Moscow in 1908.
60 Ozerov, , Chemu uchit nas Amerika? (Moscow, 1908), 19Google Scholar; idem, “My i Amerika,” in his Novaia Rossiia (Petrograd, 1916), 73–87.Google Scholar
61 Chekhov, A. P., Polnoe sobranie sochinenii i pisem (Moscow, 1944–1950), XVI, 133Google Scholar; Tverskoi, , Ocherki, 419–28.Google Scholar
62 Shragin, Boris and Todd, Albert, eds., Landmarks: A Collection of Essrys on the Russian Intelligentsia, Schwartz, Marian, trans. (New York, 1977), 5–6, 14–15, 36, 73, 86–87, 110, 152–53Google Scholar; Pipes, , Struve, 112.Google Scholar
63 The translation of Blok's “Novaia Amerika” is by Pinto, V. de S. and is taken from A Second Book of Russian Verse, Bowra, C. M., ed. (London, 1948), 74–75.Google Scholar
64 Rougle, , Three Russians, 74–75Google Scholar; Vol'skii, N. V. (N. Valentinov) Dva goda s simvolistami (Stanford, 1969), 232–34.Google Scholar
65 Vol'skii, S. (A. K. Sokolov), “Dva priatiia mira,” Zavety, no. 4 (1914), 67.Google Scholar
66 Tuve, Jeanette E., “Changing Directions in Russian-American Economic Relations,” Slavic Review, 31:1 (03 1972), 52–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gefter, M. la., “Iz istorii proniknoveniia amerikanskogo kapitala v tsarskuiu Rossiiu do pervoi mirovoi voiny,” Istoricheskie zapiski, 35 (1950), 62–86.Google Scholar
67 Kohlenberg, , “Russian-American Economic Relations,” 121 ff;Google ScholarQueen, George S., “The United States and the Material Advance in Russia, 1881–1906” (Ph.D. diss. University of Illinois, 1941Google Scholar; Lebedev, V. V., Russko-amerikanskie eknomicheskiia otnosheniia, 1900–1917 (Moscow, 1964);Google ScholarBryant, Louise, Six Red Months in Russia (New York, 1918), 176–77Google Scholar; Heald, E. T., Witness to Revolution (Kent, Ohio, 1972), 3, 17, 41, 47, 64, 78, 125Google Scholar; Marye, G. T., Nearing the End in Imperial Russia (Philadelphia, 1929), 476–77Google Scholar; Stevens, Thomas, Through Russia on a Mustang (Boston, 1891), 78Google Scholar; Taft, M. L., Strange Siberia (New York, 1911), 120, 200, 215Google Scholar; Beable, W. H., Commercial Russia (London, 1918), 211Google Scholar; Ruhl, Arthur, White Nights and Other Russian Impressions (New York, 1917), 182Google Scholar; Carstensen, Frederick V., “American Multinational Corporations in Imperial Russia” (Ph.D. diss. Yale University, 1976), 377.Google Scholar
68 The Autobiography of John Hays Hammond (New York, 1935), II, 473–75.Google Scholar On emigration, see Kurchevskii, B., O russkoi emigratsii v Ameriku (Libava, 1914), 9–14Google Scholar; Shlepakov, A. N., Immigratsiia i amerikanskii rabochii klass v epokhu imperializma (Moscow, 1966), 36–38Google Scholar; Borodin, N. A., Severo-Amerikanskie Soedinennye Shtaty i Rossiia (Petrograd, 1915), 296–303.Google Scholar The bibliography of the latter, on pp. 315–16, gives an indication of continuing Russian interest in the United States; it is, however, far from complete.
69 Borodin, , Severo-Amerikanskie Soedinennye Shtaty, 312–13.Google Scholar See Schuman, F. F., American Policy Toward Russia since 1917 (New York, 1928), 45,Google Scholar for the Lvov quotation. Also see Ganelin, R. S., Rossiia i SShA. Ocherki istorii russko-amerikanskikh otnoshenii (Leningrad, 1969), 23–29Google Scholar; Seleznev, G. K., Ten' dollara nad Rossiei (Moscow, 1957), 15–20.Google Scholar
70 Lenin, , Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, XXXVII, 59, 83.Google Scholar
71 Duranty, , Duranty Reports, 19.Google Scholar
72 Lenin, , Polnoe sobranie sochinenii, XL, 62–63.Google Scholar
73 Thompson, , The New Russia, 167.Google Scholar Cf. Sheinman, I. B., Chto ia videl v Amerike; chto delal v SSSR (Moscow, 1934), 19.Google Scholar
74 Osinskii, N. (V. V. Obolenskii), Po tu storonu okeana (Moscow-Leningrad, 1926)Google Scholar; idem, Moilzheucheniia o SShA (Moscow, 1926)Google Scholar; Levidov, Mikhail, “Amerikanizma tragifars,” LEF, no. 2 (1923), 45–46Google Scholar; Friedman, E. M., Russia in Transition (New York, 1932), 252.Google Scholar A translation of Collier's, WilliamAmericanism: A World Menace (London, 1925)Google Scholar also suggests that there was sentiment for resisting the American infatuation.
75 Zelinskii, Kornelii, “Sotsialisticheskii biznes,” in Biznes. Sbornik literaturnogo tsentra konstruktivistov, Zelinskii, K. and Sel'vinskii, I., eds. (Moscow, 1929), 50–64Google Scholar; Fuelop-Miller, René, Geist und Gesicht des Bolschewismus (Zuerich-Leipzig-Wien, 1929), 27–32Google Scholar; Baumgarten, Franziska, Arbeitswissenschaft und Psychotechnik (Munich-Berlin, 1924), 117–18.Google Scholar
76 See the following article by Bailes, Kendall E.; Fithian, Floyd J., “Soviet-American Economic Relations, 1918–1933” (Ph.D. diss. University of Nebraska, 1964), 261Google Scholar; and Sutton, Antony, Western Technology and Soviet Development (Stanford, 1968–1973), I, 343–46.Google Scholar
77 Winter, Ella, Red Virtue (New York, 1933), 76–77Google Scholar; Noe, Adolf Carl, Golden Days of Soviet Russia (Chicago, 1931), 26, 111–13Google Scholar; Mikoian, Anastas, “Dva mesiatsa v SShA,” SShA, no. 10 (10 1971), 70.Google Scholar
78 Pinkevich, A. P., The New Education in the Soviet Republic, Perlmutter, Nucia, trans. (New York, 1929), 139–41Google Scholar; McNeal, Robert H., Bride of the Revolution: Krupskaia and Lenin (Ann Arbor, Mich., 1972), 161–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lunacharskii, A. V., O narodnom obrazovanii (Moscow, 1958), 139–41.Google Scholar
79 Serebrovskii, A. P., Na zolotom fronte (Moscow-Leningrad, 1936), 74Google Scholar; Strong, , First Time in History, 234Google Scholar; Dorfman, la. G., V strane rekordnykh chisel (Moscow, 1927), 78–79.Google Scholar
80 Armytage, , Rise of Technocrats, 225Google Scholar; Lunacharskii, , O narodnom obrazovanii, 128–29Google Scholar; Margulies, Sylvia R., The Pilgrimage to Russia (Madison, Wise., 1969), 70–71.Google Scholar
81 Ludwig, Emil, Leaders of Europe (London, 1934), 378–79.Google Scholar
82 Il'ia Il'f and Evgenii Petrov, Little Golden America, Malamuth, Charles, trans. (New York, 1937), 380–82Google Scholar; Lunacharskii, , O narodnom obrazovanii, 102Google Scholar; Pogodin, , “Temp,” 41Google Scholar; Stekoll, Harry, Humanity Made to Order (New York, 1937), 123Google Scholar; Littlepage, John D., In Search of Soviet Gold (New York, 1937), 41–42Google Scholar; Anna Louise Strong, I Change Worlds (New York, 1935), 161Google ScholarPubMed; Thompson, , The New Russia, 166–67Google Scholar; Dorfman, , V strane, 50–52Google Scholar; Gintsburg, A. M., Ocherki promyshlennoi ekonomiki (Moscow, 1930), 118–19.Google Scholar
83 Bendix, Reinhard, Nationbuilding and Citizenship (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1977), 185.Google Scholar
84 Stalin, I. V., “On the Tasks of Industrial Administrators,” in Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev: Voices of Bolshevism, McNeal, Robert H., ed. (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1963), 99–102.Google Scholar
85 Maier, C. S., “Between Taylorism and Technocracy: European Ideologies and the Vision of Industrial Productivity in the 1920s,” Journal of Contemporary History, 5:2 (1970), 27–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Recasting Bourgeois Europe (Princeton, 1975), 12, 544, 583, 589.Google ScholarFordism, German is discussed in Molly Nolan, “The Infatuation with Fordism: Social Democracy and Rationalization in the Weimar Republic,” unpublished, 1979Google Scholar; and German, Amerikanismus in Peter Berg, Deutschland und Amerika, 1918–1929 (Lübeck and Hamburg, 1963), 132–53.Google Scholar