Stalin: A Political Biography, 2ND Edition, by Isaac Deutscher
Stalin: A Political Biography, 2nd Edition was written by Isaac Deutscher and published in the United States in 1967. Deutscher was a Polish Communist journalist living in London, England, who published the first edition of this work in 1949 while Stalin was in power and published the second edition 14 years after Stalin's death. The book focuses on Stalin's political achievements and gives a historically factual account of the Russian revolutions, the Bolsheviks, the Proletariat and the Soviet people in order to explain Stalin. Though the book seems objective in its historical accuracy, the author too easily excuses Stalin's many brutal and opportunistic actions, and gives Stalin too much credit for some Soviet advances. Nevertheless, the book is worth reading, so long as it is read with later, tougher books that give a more accurate picture of Stalin and the Soviet Union.
Body
a. The Author
Since no book is written in a vacuum but is heavily influenced by the author's life and times, studying the author's background is helpful in understanding and assessing his/her work. Isaac Deutscher was born into a Jewish middle-class family in Chrzanow, Poland on April 3, 1907. Though Jewish, he became an atheist as a teenager and joined the Polish Communist Party in 1926. Eventually, he grew to believe that the Stalinist leadership could not control the spread of Nazism and left or was expelled from the Polish Party in 1932. Deutscher moved to London in 1939 and worked as a journalist. He eventually wrote a number of books about different forms of Communism, including three books about Leon Trotsky, a book about Stalin and a book about Maoism. Deutscher followed the theories of Leon Trotsky and was a major critic of Stalinism and Maoism, claiming that they were both distorted socialism. The book that Deutscher wrote about Stalin was first written in 1949 while Stalin was still in power and was then revised and published as a second edition on January 1, 1967. That book is Stalin: A Political Biography, 2nd Edition. Deutscher died on August 19, 1967 (Zaveski n.d.).
b. Describe your experience (describe the book/summarize).
This book focused on Stalin's political achievements, so it spent little time on his youth. As a political biography, the book was interesting in some respects but was also dry. The characterizations of Stalin as brutal and as an enigma were not surprising because he is notorious for both. At the same time, the author mentioned a number of surprising specifics about Stalin's life. His early life, its poverty, cruelty and bleakness were all surprises. The fact that Stalin was born with another surname (Deutscher 1967, 1) is surprising, as are the poor circumstances of his early life: his father was a cobbler and reportedly an alcoholic (Deutscher 1967, 3). The fact that Stalin was sickly with smallpox and blood infection in early life (Deutscher 1967, 2) was also surprising and the brutal beating he supposedly took from his father were disturbing (Deutscher 1967, 3). There was nothing in his bleak early life that would lead a person to believe that Stalin would rise to world power.
Stalin as a young man was also surprising in some respects, both because of his first time away from home and his transformation. His partial education at a theological seminary as a young man was a shock (Deutscher 1967, 9). After he left the seminary, he came into contact with the a group -- the Messame Dassy - that read Communist literature, including that of Lenin, Stalin became a member of the Social Democratic Labor Party and eventually met Lenin (Deutscher 1967, 50, 57-8). The fact that Stalin was an utter outlaw as a young man was also surprising: he underwent arrests, exiles and escapes after joining the Social Democratic Labor Party (Deutscher 1967, 50, 57-8, 93). The author shows the complicated relationship of Lenin and Stalin (Deutscher 1967, 270-1). Though Stalin was drawn to Lenin, Stalin was obviously an opportunist rather than an idealist and took advantage when possible to advance his own interests. The first big power grab by Stalin was when he used his power as General Secretary -- appointed in 1922 - to make appointments of party members to individuals who owed him and he eventually undermined Lenin's power (Deutscher 1967, 228-234). By the time people realized what was happening, not even Lenin -- who was already very ill -- could take the power out of Stalin's hands.
After Lenin's death, Stalin used the power he'd already amassed, along with other maneuvers, to officially seize...
Marxism and National Socialism Lenin's version of socialism, which became the model for the Soviet Union, China, Cuba and other underdeveloped nations that underwent revolutions in the 20th Century, was highly centralized, hierarchical and authoritarian. It emphasized rapid industrialization and economic development under the direction of the Communist Party, although in all these semi-feudal societies this was carried out without the benefits of any type of liberal or democratic traditions. Lenin
Moreover, it was also during his final years in Europe that he developed his ideas about muralismo (mural art) as public art which would focus on the Mexican people (Brenner 280). He saw himself as a revolutionary who believed that all art was political propaganda thus he chose painting as his most important tool of expression because he thought that it was the easiest and most effective method of
Spanish Civil War The famous Spanish Civil War fought from the year 1936 to 1939. This war was fought between two groups; the Republicans and the Nationalists. The Republicans were the supporters of the established Spanish republic; meanwhile the latter were a group of rebels who were led by General Francisco Franco. Franco emerged victorious in this war and ruled Spain for the next 36 years as a dictator. After a group
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now