How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Triumvirate against Trotsky
Advertisements

General & Credit Exam Questions Stalin. In Source A a young communist, who took part in the collectivisation of land under Stalin, describes events in.
Europe Between the Wars Dictatorship and Depression.
How far do you agree that economic hardship was the cause for the 1917 revolution? Economic Hardship – faced by the peasants (land reforms) and the urban.
Recap the Russian Revolution. Lenin Restores Order Lenin sets out to rebuild the new USSR & its economy Lenin sets out to rebuild the new USSR & its economy.
Year 12 History NCEA 2.5 Force or Movement The Russian Revolution.
How and why did Stalin become party leader?
Interpretations of the Great Terror L/O – To evaluate the position of different historians on the Great Terror.
Soviet Union Under Stalin
Second Semester Units, Grading, and Rule Reminders Class Reading and Writing Growth.
Lenin to Stalin.
Totalitarianism Ch
Totalitarianism Ch 30.2.
Terms 1. Lenin 2. Stalin 3. Trotsky 4. Five Year Plans 5. command economy What did Stalin’s Soviet Union look like? Terms 6. collective farms 7. Kulaks.
The USSR under Stalin. Power struggle Lenin had not appointed a successor, but adviced other members of the Politburo to remove Stalin from.
The Soviet Union Stalin I. Death of Lenin In 1924 Lenin died.In 1924 Lenin died. The rule of the first Communist leader was over.The rule of the first.
Lenin to Stalin Mr. Eischen, Mr. Cleveland and Mrs. McCarthy.
Learning Goal  The students will understand the Rise of the Dictatorial Regimes after WWI.  Media  Attitudes  Totalitarian States  Fascism  Collectivizm.
Russian Revolution Causes for March 1917 Revolution  Czars had reformed too little  Peasants extremely poor  Revolutionaries hatched radical.
A New Era, the revolution continues Ch. 24 section 2.
©2009, TESCCC World History, Unit 10, Lesson 2 The Soviet Union Under Stalin Unit 10: The Rise of Totalitarianism and World War II Lesson 2.
Stalin and the Historians
“1994 was the first year without Lenin. The Communist Party and the Soviet people continued their creative work of building socialism under Comrade Stalin’s.
14.5 Notes: Revolution and Civil War in Russia
 The last Tsar steps down  The Duma establishes a provisional government  Alexander Kerensky leads this government  His decision to stay in WW1 cost.
The Russian Revolution & the Rise of Communism Class Conflict, Propaganda, Repression.
Bellringer SOL Challenge 8 Have out the SOL Wrap-Up…is it done? BJOTD: Why did the rocket lose its job? – Submitted by Kenni Ruby.
Joseph Stalin’s Rise to Power
The Soviet Union under Stalin, Kidner, Ch. 27, pp
Lenin’s Successor Lenin died in He had never fully recovered from a bullet wound during an assassination attempt in When he died, Petrograd.
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
Unit 10 Part 2 From Lenin to Stalin. Post Civil War USSR 1920: Lenin turns his attention to governing The Soviet Union 1920: Lenin turns his attention.
History & the Novel Russia & the Rise of Stalin: Key Timeline,
Stalin’s purges and the Show Trials In some Communists party members criticised Stalin’s collectivisation policy and his wife committed suicide.
The Soviet Experiment: Stalin’s Revolution
How Stalin Gained Control of the Party and USSR
Friday 4/4/14 RAP 1.What was the NEP? Who started it? 2.What was the Five Year Plan? Who started it? 3.Which leader, Lenin or Stalin, do you think was.
Power Struggle Issues. Kamenev and Zinoviev joined in 1926 Stalin turned against the Right in 1929 Trotsky and the Left * End of NEP Peasants should be.
The Soviet Experiment Lenin and the Rise of Stalin Kagan, Ch. 27.
Stalin’s rise to power Exam focus: AQA Elizabeth Francis Philip Allan Publishers © 2015.
CHAPTER 28 WORLD WAR AND COMPETING VISIONS OF MODERNITY TO 1945 New Variations on Modernity: The Soviet Union and Communism.
Communism and Joseph Stalin What were Stalin’s changes to the Leninist ideology? What split the communist world apart?
Objectives Explain the causes of the March Revolution.
THE SOVIET UNION Chapter 29 Section 4. What did Lenin accomplish? (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov) Nationalization – all major industries under state control.
Russia: Rapid Industrialization the slowing down of economic production, leads Soviet Communist leader Joseph Stalin to abandon Lenin’s New Economic Policy.
On half-sheet write your research question AND an initial response to this question.
The Soviet Experiment Begins Who was left in charge of Bolshevik Russia at the end of the Russian Revolution?
Focus 1/7 Under the leadership of Vladimir Lenin, Russia became a communist state known as the Soviet Union. Lenin began to rebuild Russia under the ideals.
Chapter 9 Section 2 THE RISE OF DICTATORIAL REGIMES.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Russian Revolution and Civil War.
Agriculture : An overview. Emancipation Alexander’s Emancipation promised many reforms, technically reversing a policy hundreds of years old,
9.2 Notes: Part III Objective: Describe how Lenin and Stalin create a totalitarian Russia.
9.2 Notes: Part III Objective: Describe how Lenin and Stalin create a totalitarian Russia.
Russian Revolution Policies of the Czars
 When we examine the reasons behind the rise of Stalin, there are TWO MAIN FACTORS RESPONSIBLE:  Stalin’s Cunning Personality  Stalin Outwitted His.
Totalitarianism Chapter 14, Section 2. Introduction After Lenin dies, Stalin seizes power and transforms the Soviet Union into a totalitarian state. –“–“Stalin,
Rise of Stalin Lenin’s death Trotsky vs Stalin
Reasons for Stalin’s Success
4. SOVIET HISTORY QUIZ PRE-REVOLUTIONARY PRECEDENTS
Why did Stalin become party leader?
The Rise of Stalin.
Do Now Read “The Need for Progress”, a speech given by Joseph Stalin in Answer the three questions at the bottom of the page, write the answers.
JOSEPH STALIN.
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
Unit II: Challenges & Changes
The Bolshevik Revolution & Beyond
How the Soviet Union was created
Warm Up HW: Due Friday-Practice Paper 2 Questions.
From Russia to the USSR State Standard W.42: Compare the connection between economic and political policies, the absence of a free press, and systematic.
Presentation transcript:

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008)

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) The key issue is the link between Stalin and Lenin. How far…allows candidates to argue that either change or continuity was more important.

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) Weak answers might describe some of Stalin’s policies without making any attempt to compare or contrast them with Lenin’s work. Focus on Stalin comment how far he adhered to or departed from the policies of Lenin.

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) Stalin claimed to continue Lenin’s policies This was necessary for any post-revolutionary leader One of the justifications for the purge of Trotsky and his followers was that they departed from Lenin’s teachings Stalin gained power by claiming to be Lenin’s successor although candidates can explain how he manipulated himself into power. The use of propaganda to show he was the rightful heir to Lenin. Stalin tricked Trotsky and made him missed funeral. Chief mourner of Lenin’s funeral. Made alliances to remove opposition (refer to the rise of power)

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) Stalin cancelled the features of NEP that were associated with private enterprise although Lenin justified the NEP as a necessary temporary measure. The policies of collectivisation went much further than Lenin advocated Though it provided food surpluses to get foreign exchange and support further industrial growth, this forced policy led to liquidation of kulaks and extend socialism to the countryside The use of machinery reduced the labour requirements and encouraged peasants to work in industrial plants

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) Stalin’s purges were different from the methods used by Lenin. Their scale was greater although Lenin had insisted on one-party government and the dominance of the Bolsheviks. Show trials were regularly carried out c.f. Lenin The Great Purges 1930s Paranoid tendencies Mistrusted everyone To get rid of class enemies in all disguises

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) Stalin’s personal role was obstructive and destructive Ridding of ‘class enemies’ No tolerance of religious freedom Peasants treated as second-class citizens

How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin How far did Stalin to 1939 continue the policies of Lenin? (OCT/NOV 2008) The cult of personality was more pronounced under Stalin. Stalin as superhero through statues and paintings Highlighted Stalin and attributed positive qualities Pronounced from mid 1930s onwards

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of continuity Stalin had few ideas of his own, he merely applied those of Lenin. This was stressed by the Soviet school under Stalin to justify policy decisions The rooting out of class enemies: there is similarity between the aims of Lenin during the civil war (to remove the old order) and those of Stalin under the first FYP (aimed at removing Nepmen and Kulaks). The policies of the 1930s were driven by attitudes shaped by the civil war under Lenin. This has been emphasised by revisionist historians. The party should govern in the interests of the working class. This was the stated aim of both leaders.

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of continuity The growth of the bureaucracy: the apparatus of the party and state had grown under Lenin, Stalin merely built on this. The use of terror: Lenin had purged political opponents as well as members of his own party. This provided a precedent for Stalin. Stalinism grew out of the authoritarian tendencies of Bolshevism which were evident before Stalin. Thus there is continuity with Lenin. The Bolshevik Revolution was therefore the original sin. This view has been stressed by the liberal school who see all aspects of communism in a negative light. Stalin merely highlighted the brutal nature of the Soviet regime. Russian writers since the fall of communism in 1991 have often come to this conclusion.

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of continuity Stalin was one of a long line of Russian despotic leaders. Thus the continuity is not just with Lenin but with long-term trends in Russian history which were also responsible for Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great. This view has been put forward by ‘Russia’s Revenge’ school in the West which sees Stalin as a ‘Red Tsar’.

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of change Stalin betrayed the revolution by perverting it for its own ends. A Dictatorship of the Proletariat was turned into a personal dictatorship of Stalin. This view was emphasised by Trotsky and his supporters Lenin’s use of terror was justified as the civil war was threatened the existence of the regime; Stalin used terror for his own ends.

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of change Stalin’s economic policies marked a break from the NEP. The emphasis was now on coercion rather than compromise. In this sense Stalin broke away from the policies of Lenin. This was emphasised by Soviet writers in the period of Glasnost. Supporters of the more conciliatory policies of Bukharin also emphasise this change away from the NEP

Lenin and Stalin: Elements of change The revolution was in danger of running into the ground by 1928. The policies of Stalin brought about real changes which saved the revolution. The determinist school emphasises this factor. Lenin was tolerant – within limits – of debate within the party; Stalin was intolerant of any dissent.