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Introduction: V. I. Lenin's Life and Legacy, Introduction p. 1-12.
- Lenin was born under a divine right monarchy
- state was no longer chief owner and employer
- power went to Party officials from wealthy elites
- his rule was seen as an aberration
- system spread to China, Indochina, North Korea and Cuba
- it its heydey, the Soviet Union challenged America: technologically and militarily
- the Bolsheviks lauded Lenin as a secular saint-way to socialism.
- initiator and architect of the Soviet System
- left a long paper trail of written instructions
Youth
- grew up at a rebellious time
- Russia lost the Crimean War, painful memory of defeat
- Lenin's father was a school inspector-educated
- Tsar Alexander II carried out Great Reforms to address shortcomings:
- 1) abolished serfdom: 20M peasants freed
- 2) judicial system of trial by peers
- 3) fiscal reform
- 4) a liberalization of censorship
- 5) measures to improve and expand education
- 6) Universal Military Service Statute of 1874
- nobles, priests, merchants, and lower-class city residents were above peasants in a) law, b) education, and c) economic life.
- considerable growth> but Russian Empire was behind Britain, France, and Germany.
- Asia, Latin America, and Africa: stagnant economies
- Russia's borders went into the Ottoman Empire, Afghanistan(S.), China and Pacific Ocean(E), Artic Ocean(N), Germany, Austro Hungary and Romania(W, SW)
- 1913: only 1/2 of economy was agriculture
- 1914: Moscow is almost 2,000,000
- ostentatious displays of wealth-obscene with the grinding poverty of the day.
- more education, less likely to support the czar
- 1913: 68% of army recruits were literate
- 1910: 75% of St. Petersburg and 66% of Moscow were literate
- intelligentsia: critics of autocracy. Highly educated, critically-minded elites.
- liberals wanted a parliamentary democracy
- populists wanted an egalitarian society
- Tsar Alexander II was killed by populists
- the next czar, Alexander III rejected reform almost entirely
- Lenin began learning law but was expelled for belonging to a radical organization
- The German Social Democratic Party(SPD) believed in Marx, got 1.47M votes
- German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck(conservative) tried to crush the Social Democrats but he was unsuccessful
- populists valued morally committed individuals as agents of change (Social reform)
- Marxists believed state power was needed
- populists didn't want capitalist industrialization
- Marxists believed development went a) primitive, b) slave-holding, c) feudal, d) capitalist, e) communist
- Marxists wanted a classless Communist society
- 1) Russia would be rescued by revolutions in advanced industrial countries
- 2) Lenin wanted a socialist state in Russia alone
- 3) Lenin wrote anti-populist pamphlets
- Lenin was exiled to Siberia
- Krupskaia-skilled and loyal helpmate to Lenin
- Lenin wrote, The Development of Capitalism in Russia, gained him reputation as an economist
- peasants adopted iron plows, harrows and improved houses with brick stoves and tin roofs and wore machine made clothing
- founded the newspaper, The Spark (Iskra) and pamphlet, What Is To Be Done?
- professional revolutionaries would lead the masses to socialism
- Mensheviks(the minority), Bolsheviks(the majority)
- Revolution of 1905, spurred by unpopular war in Japan
- the czar fired on peaceful protests in Bloody Sunday
- czar promised basic civil freedoms as well as representative assembly
- moderates were pleased
- the trade union movement for an 8 hour day was ignored
- Lenin wrote for the Bolshevik, New Life
- Tsar Nicholas II ignored the October Manifesto and announced a more limited electoral system
- two State Dumas were democratically elected, the czar dissolved the two for being overly radical
- the bourgeois liberals failed to improve conditions for the workers
- Bolshevik activities were financed by bank robberies, etc.
- Lenin and wife left for Helsinki in November, 1907
- Lenin published "The Truth"
- Lenin wrote, Imperialism: The Highest Stage Of Capitalism and The State and Revolution
- he argued that imperialist wars would bring down European capitalism
- the second book was about a state that engaged in a social and economic revolution
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