Stalinist Russia - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Stalinist Russia

Description:

Stalinist Russia Domestic Policies Economic Policies – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:146
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: Colet75
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Stalinist Russia


1
Stalinist Russia
  • Domestic Policies
  • Economic Policies

2
Did Stalin start something new or carry on what
was started by Lenin?
  • Soviet Historiography
  • Stalin ordered a compulsory History book to be
    published (1938) this claims Stalin has only
    done what Lenin intended.
  • Trotsky Claiming that Stalin ruined the rev.
    allowing the bureaucracy to grow stronger and
    taking power from the workers ideals of rev.
  • During Khrushchev (53-64) Stalin was to blame.
    Stalin is scapegoat for everything that went
    wrong.
  • Brezhnev-Gorbachev (64-85) Brezhnev erased
    Stalin.
  • Gorbachev Back to Lenin not just Stalin,
    whole period regarded as a mistake.
  • Fall of Soviet Union Historians criticise whole
    period.

3
Did Stalin start something new or carry on what
was started by Lenin?
  • Western Historiography
  • Reporters visited Stalins Russia Seen as a
    great experiment. Many Western communists saw the
    USSR as the Saviour against Hitlers Germany.
  • COLD WAR LEADS TO NEW APPROACH
  • Liberal School (post 45)
  • Focussed on Stalins personal desire for
    totalitarian state.
  • Determinist School
  • Criticises Liberal approach, arguing role of
    Stalin is less important.
  • Revisionist School
  • Focussed on role played by the people of the
    Soviet Union. They show that many supported
    Collectivisation.

4
How popular was Stalin?
  • Liberals
  • Focus on negative side of Stalinism. Argue that
    Stalin was v. unpopular. They focus on citizens
    lack of freedom.
  • Revisionists
  • Stalin was popular among certain sectors of
    society. Hanna Arendts Origins of
    Totalitarianism points out that cruel dictators
    usually get support from many groups of society.

5
Personal Dictatorship
  • Control over the Communist Party
  • Soviet Constitution of 1936 (known as the Stalin
    Constitution)
  • - Redesigned the govt. of the Soviet Union.
  • - Basically focused power in Stalins hands.
  • ? Gave right to vote (but only for Communist
    Party ?)
  • Use of Terror.

6
Control over Communist Party
  • Power centralised in the hands of party
    leadership by Lenin
  • Situation enhanced by Stalin in his role as
    General Secretary
  • Seeds of Stalinism sown by Lenincheck out
    historiography for debate on this!
  • Politburo witnessed removal of members and
    replaced by Stalins cronies.
  • ALL PARTY AND STATE INSTITUTIONS REMAINED
    MECHANISMS FOR RUBBER-STAMPING DECISIONS MADE BY
    STALIN

7
1936 CONSTITUTION ?
  • Appeared highly democratic
  • All citizens given the vote as classes no longer
    existed
  • Civil Right provisions
  • Guarantee of employment

8
1936 CONSTITUTION ?
  • Restrictions on rights
  • Only Communist Party members could stand for
    election
  • Other political parties regarded as product of
    class conflict that no longer existed
  • Constitution not taken seriously at home or
    abroad
  • THE GREAT TERROR FOLLOWED IN 1937

9
Failure of Political Institutions
  • Not caused by Stalins actions alone
  • Weak political bodies inherited from Lenin
  • Stalin simply continued to hold back
    decision-making outside the leadership
  • By 1924 State organisations already subordinate
    to Party
  • Election rigged by leadership
  • Institutions such as Politburo met less
    frequently as Stalin increased his control from
    once a week to 9 times a year by mid 1930s

10
USE OF TERROR
  • Terror was used to keep control over the Party
  • Opposition saw more than demotion
  • Local Party officials purged as well as former
    leadership
  • Terrorists themselves kept in line
  • TERROR WAS AN INTEGRAL PART OF STALINS METHOD OF
    CONTROL but not knew to the communist Party (but
    wrong to see it as direct continuation Of Lenin
    who used it when faced with counter-revolutionary
    threat)
  • Stalin justified it because of threat from class
    enemies

11
GREAT TERROR
  • Launched when Party was secure indicating Stalin
    was securing his own position ( so differing from
    Lenin again but Lenin made use of terror an
    acceptable policy)
  • STALINS PERSONAL DICTATORSHIP NOT AN INEVITABLE
    DEVELOPMENT FROM LENINISM but trends under Lenin
    helped it to develop growth of bureaucracy,
    failure of political institutions to develop, use
    of terror

12
LIMITS TO STALINS POWER
  • Limited ability of any individual to control all
    activity
  • (minor) Limitations from within leadership
    despite presence of yes men- Ryutin Affair,
  • Revising down of 2nd 5 Year Plan targets,
    Kuibyshev and Ordzhonikidze opposition to
    brutality of regime
  • In carrying out Stalins will, party leaders
    developed their own power base
  • LIMITS FROM BELOW- demands for rapid
    industrialisation
  • Debate over Terror illustrates degree of control
    Stalin had

13
DOMESTIC POLICIES
  • EDUCATION
  • Newspapers available at low prices
  • Newspapers provided to factory workers
  • Publishers printed the Russian classis and
    foreign literature at low prices thus making
    books accessible to most people
  • Youth groups such as Young Pioneers and
    Komosomols compulsory for students and future
    members of the party were drawn from these
    groups.
  • Creation of stereotypical role models

14
RESULTS
  • 96 literacy for males in USSR by 1939
  • 82 literacy for females in 1939
  • Changes in the form and structure of schools
  • Emphasis on narrow specialist courses
  • Preferences to proletarian background was
    withdrawn

15
Control of the Arts and Culture
  • Media
  • Broadcasts
  • Films
  • Publications

16
RADIO
  • Set up in every village , every hamlet across
    the country to hear the voice of StalinThe
    Soviet Radio carries to the masses the inspired
    words of Bolshevik truth, aids the people in tis
    struggle for the full victory of Communism in our
    country, summons them to heroic deeds in the name
    of the further strengthening of the power of the
    economic and cultural prosperity of the USSR

17
Cinema
18
Cinema
  • Patriotic themes
  • End of experimentation that had been so much a
    part of the Proletkult
  • References to historical past to create the myth
    of the Soviet state
  • From 1930s the tone was intensely patriotic

19
Socialist realism
  • It was the new approved style for books ,creative
    art and media.
  • The aim was to glorify the worker, the
    Stakhanovite, the Kolhozes in short to show what
    it should be rather what it really was

20
RAPP and Union of Russian Writers
  • Membership to RAPP was compulsory for writers
  • Censorship of works by RAPP
  • Eventually RAPP disbanded because it was too
    avant garde
  • Maxim Gorky came back to head RUW
  • Writers , composers artists were supposed to toe
    the ideological line but what was it?

21
Face lift Projects
  • Moscow given a face lift
  • Tall gigantic buildings became the norm an
    expression of the gigantomania that was so
    characteristic of Stalins economic policies
  • Buildings tall and soaring
  • Decorated with stained glass and huge gigantic
    murals and themes that reflected Soviet socialist
    realism
  • Metro, the Hermitage, Sports stadia all a part
    of the grand scheme

22
Impact on families and family life?
  • Under Stalin there was a reversal of many of the
    policies that had been formulated under Lenin
  • Why?
  • Part of the change was necessary because of the
    huge disruptions caused by migration to cities or
    deportations of families to labour camps
  • In some cases families left in the care of
    relatives or brought up on Collective farms

23
Family life
  • Life in the cities was harsh
  • Livng conditions claustrophobic
  • Housing shortage
  • Sharing of facilities
  • Enormous strain on family life
  • Abandonment of families was common
  • Rise of street gangs and juvenile crime a serious
    problem
  • Hooliganism
  • Falling birth rate

24
Solutions
  • Death penalty for juvenile delinquents over the
    age of 12
  • Juvenile delinquents to be held under state
    custody and parents to pay for upkeep
  • Abortion illegal and doctors punished
  • Divorce very difficult
  • Homosexuality banned
  • Rewards to mothers for having numerous children
  • Childcare in factories to allow women to work

25
Five Year Plans
  • Private trades banned
  • Coal, Oil gas, engineering
  • GOSPLAN State Planning Committee Responsible
    for economic planning.
  • Individual target setting for factories
  • New cities Magnitogorsk
  • KOMSOMOL Youth organisation political organ
    for spreading Communist teachings.
  • Gulag Forced labour camps
  • Stakhanovites Reward individuals achievements
    in production.

26
  • Success?
  • Failure?
  • Huge public work schemes
  • Education programme
  • Industrial output expanded
  • Russia survived WWII
  • Human cost 10 to 40 million deaths
  • Overcrowding in cities
  • Production focused on heavy industry and military
  • Figures were unreliable
  • Quantity not quality
  • No criticism allowed

27
Collectivism
  • Small farms were joined together (Sovkhozes and
    Kolkhozes)
  • To improve efficiency
  • Destroy Kulaks
  • Increase Stalins control of countryside
  • Increase grain productions to sell abroad for
    foreign currencies.

28
  • Success?
  • Failure?
  • By 1940, 99 of land collectivised
  • Production did increase (Wheat up 33)
  • New modern equipment and chemicals
  • Education programmes in collectives
  • Red Army was fed up during WWI
  • Kulaks were destroyed
  • 1932-33 famine (5 million dead)
  • Human cost 10 million peasants deported
  • Sovkhozes were a failure
  • Unpopular

29
Types of Questions
  • 2012 Purges promotes by social economic
    factors?
  • 2011 Stalins industrialisation policy
  • 2010 Everyday life source
  • 2009 Collectivisation
  • 2009 Purges source
  • 2008 Purges terror
  • 2008 Stalins industrialisation
  • 2007 5 Year Plans
  • 2007 Stalins foreign policy post WWII
  • 2007 Stalinist State source

30
Were Stalins economic policies effective?
  • Some argue that Stalins policies were a product
    of their time and its changing circumstance.
  • War was on the way and Russia was depending on a
    backward agricultural system.
  • This was a means of discarding NEP an its
    supporters (the right) and providing stable
    footing for the war. Soviet propaganda emphasised
    Russias need to industrialise and to use
    collectivisation as a means to create
    self-sufficiency.

31
Were Stalins economic policies effective?
  • Philips It is possible to see the policies as no
    different from the path either Trotsky or Lenin
    would have undertaken.
  • Revisionists Concentrate on the importance of
    rank and files push for industrialisation. This
    challenges Bukharins notion of the economic
    policies as an instrument for personal
    dictatorship.
  • Lavar notes that the need for industrialisation
    was recognised by all levels of society but it
    was the sheer size of the task that would startle
    the majority. He argues that industrialisation
    would not occur without collectivisation and this
    enabled Stalin to perform the Great Turn where he
    defeated his rivals.

32
Collectivisation
  • Would allow larger areas to be farmed.
  • New technology meant fewer peasants were needed.
  • Oxley in theory the state would manage
    agriculture thereby guaranteeing a future food
    supply.
  • Corin Fiehn Socialism in the countryside would
    be achieved and the peasantry would learn to work
    cooperatively and live communally.
  • Phillips Initially, the process of
    collectivisation was carried out on a voluntary
    basis but by 1929, with the right defeated,
    forced grain requisitions escalated into a
    full-blown attack on the peasantry which
    collectivisation constituted.

33
Collectivisation
  • By the end of 1929, Stalin announced liquidation
    of the Kulaks as a class.
  • Phillips highlights the 25000 urban party
    activists sent to the countryside in an attempt
    to root out Kulaks, seizing land and animals for
    the new collective farms.
  • As the Kulaks were deported the Twenty-five
    thousanders were left to run the farms with no
    real knowledge of organisation (CF).

34
Collectivisation
  • Lee highlights the speed with which
    collectivisation was implemented and the level of
    peasant resistance.
  • Stalin then tried to say that the centre had lost
    the initiative to the localities, local officials
    becoming dizzy with success however
  • Liberals argue against his excuse saying it was
    an explanation of the side-effects before
    launching into a repeat of the process.
  • Most likely is the revisionist argument who refer
    to the idea that far from being part of a
    pre-meditated plan, Stalin was in fact struggling
    to retain control of a situation that was
    slipping beyond him.
  • As Lee suggests, the localities enforced
    collectivisation with excessive zeal, but equally
    so did they halt collectivisation with as much
    pressure.
  • The end result was for Stalin to react to the
    circumstance and start the process again from the
    centre (1931), this time with even more dramatic
    repercussions.

35
Famine, 1932-34
  • This was, a CF argue, man made. It was a direct
    result of the upheavel and social change of
    collectivisation the purging of the Kulaks, the
    poorly organised collectives, lack of machinery
    and fertilisers and the peasant resistance
    through slaughtering animals.
  • Conquests comments that matters were worsened by
    the governments insistence on continuing to
    export grain and bluntly ignoring the famine.
    Requisitioned grain was left rotting in railway
    sidings.
  • Gill refers to the high number of deaths
    (unknown) due to the famine.
  • Laver states that politically it had been a
    success as for the first time since the
    revolution the party had a hold over the
    countryside, with over a quarter of a million
    collective units replacing 25 million farms.
  • Although grain harvests had dropped, grain
    procurement had not, meaning the workforce and
    exports were still being provided for.

36
Above or below?
  • Lee writes that it is possible to see the process
    of industrialisation as a dictation from above or
    Stalin being influenced by below.
  • CF state that party members were inspired by the
    idea of socialism rivalling capitalism through
    rapid industrialisation.
  • As Oxley writes, in theory industrialisation
    would be instigated through propaganda, forced
    labour, socialist competition, low wages, fear
    and education.
  • According to CF, each plan had a specific target
    and would be declared finished a year ahead of
    schedule.
  • Spectacular projects would be conceived to
    demonstrate the might of the soviet machine to
    the western world and huge industrial projects
    were constructed east of the Ural mountains
    leaving them less vulnerable to attack.

37
Reality
  • In the first five year plan many targets were
    not met.
  • Fitzpatrick comments that the unrealistic
    planning acted as a propaganda device, spurring
    people towards greater achievements.
  • Lack of materials prompted fierce rivalry amongst
    managers as bribery and corruption was rife.
  • The fear of not meeting targets meant that (as
    CF suggest) overproduction in areas was
    sub-standard whilst scarce materials contributed
    to underproduction in other areas.
  • Stalins response was to identify a scapegoat as
    Oxley states, the main target being the bourgeois
    specialists.
  • At the start of the 2nd five year plan everything
    was on the verge of collapse as shortages,
    disruption and lack of skilled workers were all
    too prominent.
  • Although the 2nd Five year plan envisaged
    improvements in consumer commodities, CF observe
    that resources were often diverted into other
    areas.

38
Summary
  • Getty writes that Stalin, whilst being officially
    responsible for collectivisation, he was strongly
    influenced by the social, economic and political
    environment that he did not create.
  • With the failure of NEP, forced collectivisation
    was a means to defeat his rivals and maintain
    Russias path to socialism thus satisfying the
    workers.
  • Despite the horrific manner with which
    collectivisation was inflicted, it did provide
    the means for Stalins visions of
    industrialisation.
  • According to Laver, Stalin achieved on a massive
    scale what Peter the Great and Witte had begun
    the difference being quantity and quality.
  • There were massive mistakes and disasters but as
    Nove says, when set against the context of the
    time when capitalism was in crisis, Stalins
    efforts should not be underestimated.
  • Certainly the human cost was appalling, however,
    ultimately without this crude leap forward, as
    Nove concludes, Russia would not have created the
    sort of industrial base that helped them win
    WWII.

39
For next week
  • Read and prepare for discussion on Stalins
    purges.
  • 1st place to look? Information in the Advanced
    Higher folder on pupil network.
  • Very basic website (starter) http//www.johndclar
    e.net/Russ12.htm
  • Better website (Yale University Press)
    http//www.yale.edu/annals/siegelbaum/
  • I expect detail, historiography and for you to
  • demonstrate an understanding of how you
  • would use both in an essay source answer!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com