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October and the World: The Bolshevik Revolution and Its Aftermath

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Jonathan Haslam
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Abstract

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Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

References

1 Carr, E. H., The bolshevik revolution, 1917–23, 1 (Penguin, London, 1973), 110–11.Google Scholar

2 Schapiro, L., The origins of the communist autocracy (London, 1955), p. 351.Google Scholar

3 Lenin, V. I., Collected works, xiii (Moscow, 1962), 476.Google Scholar

4 Ibid., xxvi (Moscow, 1972), 41.

5 Lenin, Selected works, 11 (Moscow, 1970), 372–3.

6 ‘… to smash the old bureaucratic machine at once and begin immediately to construct a new one that will make possible the gradual abolition of all bureaucracy - this is not Utopia, it is the experience of the Commune, the direct and immediate task of the revolutionary proletariat’, Ibid.. p. 321.

7 ‘The question of nationalities or “autonomisation”’, 30 Jan.1922, Lenin, , Last letters and articles (Moscow, 1971), p. 18.Google Scholar

8 ‘A revolution of the 1789 or the 1848 type?’, Lenin, , Collected works, viii (Moscow, 1962), 258.Google Scholar

9 ‘The unity congress of the RSDLP’, Ibid.. p. 280.

10 Luxemburg, Rosa, The Russian Revolution and Leninism or Marxism? (Michigan, 1961), p. 79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar