Rethinking the Russian Revolution (Reading History series)
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Average customer review:Product Description
For its admirers, the Russian Revolution is a milestone in human progress; for its critics, it is a catastrophe of monstrous proportions. Edward Acton's stimulating study combines an introduction to the momentous events of 1917 with an analysis of this controversy.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #141158 in Books
- Published on: 1990-07-05
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
This work is intended principally to allow the student and nonspecialist to acquire a reasonably sophisticated grasp of the historiography of the Russian revolution. In this, it succeeds strongly, largely due to a clarity of presentation grounded in the author's strong interpretational grasp. 'Rethinking the Russian Revolution' will likely become standard fare in university classrooms. -- Slavic Review
Review
This work is intended principally to allow the student and nonspecialist to acquire a reasonably sophisticated grasp of the historiography of the Russian revolution. In this, it succeeds strongly, largely due to a clarity of presentation grounded in the author's strong interpretational grasp. 'Rethinking the Russian Revolution' will likely become standard fare in university classrooms. (Slavic Review )
Customer Reviews
Essential for us A levellers, and almost enjoyable!
For those who are struggling revising for the "Lenin and the Bolshevik establishment of power" OCR A2 paper, look no further than the 'add to basket' button at the bottom of this page. It summerises all the events you need while detailing HISTORIOGRAPHY [yes, on every event!!]. OK, it's a tad light on Libertarism, but aren't we all???!!
A good review of the historiography of the period
This book was one of the main texts in my studies of the Russian Revolution (now some ten years ago), and it's the only one I remember well. Unlike most other works in the field, Acton doesn't seem to have a political axe to grind, but treats each subtopic with a discursive approach: weighing up all sides of the arguments. As such, it's an essay-writer's dream: you can get plenty of material, and not a few essay layouts, from this book. If you're a lazy student (and I certainly was) you should consider grabbing a copy.




