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“Truth Behind Bars”: Reflections on the Fate of the Russian Revolution: Title Page
“Truth Behind Bars”: Reflections on the Fate of the Russian Revolution
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table of contents
Cover
Preface: On Forgetting to Read Solzhenitsyn
Acknowledgements
A Note on Translations and Transliterations
Introduction: Hope and Horror
Part 1. Vorkuta: Anvil of the Working Class
1. One Long Night, 1936–38
2. Striking Against the Gulag, 1947–53
3. The Vengeance of History, 1989–91
Part 2. Self-Emancipation Versus Substitutionism
4. The Peasant-in-Uniform
5. The Agrarian Question
6. Poland and Georgia—The Export of Revolution
7. Germany and Hungary—The United Front
Part 3. The Rear-View Mirror
8. Trotsky on Stalinism: The Surplus and the Machine
9. A Movement’s Dirty Linen
10. Lenin—Beyond Reverence
11. Intellectuals and the Working Class
Conclusion: Ends and Means
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About This Text
Reflections on the Fate of the Russian Revolution
“Truth Behind Bars”
PAUL KELLOGG
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