Soviet Inflection Points—A Play in Three Acts

This article is about contingency and determination. It identifies three “inflection points”—tipping points or points of no return—in the not-so-longue durée of Soviet history: 1929, 1959, and 1989. The article thus reflects on the collectivization of agriculture and associated brutalities; the prom...

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Veröffentlicht in:International labor and working class history 2024-10, Vol.106, p.378-390
1. Verfasser: Siegelbaum, Lewis H.
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description This article is about contingency and determination. It identifies three “inflection points”—tipping points or points of no return—in the not-so-longue durée of Soviet history: 1929, 1959, and 1989. The article thus reflects on the collectivization of agriculture and associated brutalities; the promise and limitations of Khrushchev’s reforms as well as the appeal—again, limited—of the Soviet Union to the emerging Third World; and the opportunities presented by perestroika and glasnost to reconfigure relations and purposes of production before the waves of nationalism and neoliberal market madness washed over the Soviet Union.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Cambridge Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Agriculture
Bolshevism
Civil war
Collectivization
Developing countries
Economic policy
Famine
Forces and relations of production
Households
LDCs
Nationalism
Neoliberalism
Peasants
Productivity
Special Feature
title Soviet Inflection Points—A Play in Three Acts
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