Despite popular belief, the History powerpoints on the Russian Revolution are now available on a web page, which is here. Most topics are covered, but please note that there is no presentation on the effects of the war, 1914 - 1917. Sorry.
There are also a couple of British History revision powerpoints on the page for your reference, as well as a link to AQA's mark schemes.
A2 students will find the Eastern Europe on this page as well.
Thursday, 31 May 2007
Monday, 5 February 2007
Conference on the Revolution - An Overview

There is a great deal to note down from today's Russian Revolution conference, and I will put notes from each of the lectures up here. Each of the lecturers had useful things to say, although delivery varied from the competent and listenable, to the convoluted and sleep inducing, without ever really hitting the excitement button! Nonetheless, use their insights in exam answers and you might well be able to pass yourself off as a student who knows something - not a skill to be sniffed at. To start, then, a quick summary of the main points.
Robert Service's overview was a helpful guide to where historical debate on the Revolution has been going, and helped to place the subsequent lectures in context. Broadly, the post-war consensus focused on the seminal importance of Lenin and the pre-programmed aims and subsequent success of the Bolshevik Party. The so-called revisionists, from the 1970s onwards, then moved the debate away from Lenin and towards social and more localised factors. They also deconstructed the idea of the Bolsheviks as a pre-ordained party of power, with a clear, unitary plan of action.
As Service went on to make clear, the present position of historians is a little more subtle. Lenin's central importance in the culminating events of 1917 cannot be doubted, but the social research, or 'low' history, that has been undertaken undoubtedly fills in our view of the different forces at work, and the often autonomous actions taken around the country.
What was fascinating about the subsequent lectures was the relative consensus about the significance of Lenin's absence from the scene for much of the revolutionary period; his genius as an opportunist; the fractured nature of socialist and Bolshevik thought; the diverse centres of revolutionary activity (Petrograd's revolution didn't particularly touch the revolution going on in the villages for example); the leadership vacuum which is only eventually filled by Lenin; and the importance of the minority Bolshevik Party as a ruthless, determined organising force.
I have to say that the more I listened, the more I felt that Orlando Figes had cover

Anyway, plenty of food for thought from the lectures, write-ups of each to follow, and your comments most welcome.
Labels:
Chris Read,
Figes,
Lenin,
Robert Service,
Russian Revolution
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