Results 151 to 160 of about 915 (210)
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The Russian Civil War

2000
A. B. Murphy, F. Patrikeeff
exaly   +2 more sources

Memory Politics and the Russian Civil War

2021
In examining the re-emergence of Russia's White Movement, Memory Politics and the Russian Civil War gets to the heart of the rich 20th-century memory debates going on in Putin's Russia today. The Kremlin has been giving preference to a Soviet-lite nostalgia that denounces the 1917 Bolshevik revolution but celebrates the birth of a powerful Soviet Union
Laruelle M., Karnysheva M.
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Russian Civil War

2014
The Russian civil war was not simply a conflict between Red communists and White monarchists; rather, it involved a complex intertwining of military, social and political issues that were created or exacerbated by the Great War. It ended with the very costly victory of the Bolsheviks over the monarchists, general staff of the former Tsarist army, other
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The Russian Civil War

2004
The Russian Civil War shows how Machiavelli’s motive can leave too much of the violence unexplained. In Russia the blood flowed from the devastating consequences of the logic of an intolerant political argument and from the slack given the agents of repression.
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Russian Anarchists and the Civil War

Russian Review, 1968
When the first shots of the Russian Civil War were fired, the anarchists, in common with the other left-wing opposition parties, were faced with a serious dilemma. Which side were they to support? As staunch libertarians, they held no brief for the dictatorial policies of Lenin’s government, but the prospect of a White victory seemed even worse. Active
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Urbanization and Deurbanization in the Russian Revolution and Civil War

The Journal of Modern History, 1985
Given the obvious social dislocations indicated by the drastic decline of Russia's urban population, the question who stayed and who departed becomes important in identifying the nature of the available constituency for Soviet power during its early period of rule.
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The Great War, the Russian Civil War, and the Invention of Big Science

Science in Context, 2002
ArgumentThe revolutionary transformation in Russian science toward the Soviet model of research started even before the revolution of 1917. It was triggered by the crisis of World War I, in response to which Russian academics proposed radical changes in the goals and infrastructure of the country’s scientific effort.
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