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Russian 322 Russia Today Winter Term 09. Basic Historical Background Stephen Kotkin, Armageddon Averted. Announcements . Sections – T 1-2, B124 MLB, W 3-4 1650 CHEM (Original syllabus had wrong rooms) I have a meeting during my office hour today, will probably not be back until about 3.30.
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Russian 322Russia TodayWinter Term 09 Basic Historical BackgroundStephen Kotkin,Armageddon Averted
Announcements • Sections – T 1-2, B124 MLB, W 3-4 1650 CHEM(Original syllabus had wrong rooms) • I have a meeting during my office hour today, will probably not be back until about 3.30
Some very basic historical background, I • Origins of Russia in Medieval Rus’, centered originally on Kiev • Medieval Rus’ overwhelmed by Tartars • Muscovite city state emerges in C14th/C15th • Romanov dynasty comes to the throne in C17th
Early Rus’ (Wikipedia, modified) Khazars
Some very basic historical background, II • Transformed into major continental empire by C18th, St Petersburg new capital • 1860s – reforms, late C19th Russia industrializing fast • First World War brings economic problems and exacerbates political discontent
Some very basic historical background, III • 1917 – Bolsheviks come to power, led by Vladimir Lenin • 1920s – Soviet state becomes more and more centralized, by late 20s Stalin’s totalitarian regime in total control of country: command economy, highly supervised culture
Some very basic historical background, IV • Second World War – at huge cost, a great victory (some 25 million dead, Fascism defeated) • Post-war period – Soviet state’s great achievements: education, basic prosperity for all • As a result of victory in WWII gains a buffer zone of satellite states in Europe • Stalin dies in 1953, period of relative, if unstable liberalism under Khrushchev
Some very basic historical background, V • Big achievements in science • Optimism, cultural controls relaxed (“thaws”) • Disaster in foreign policy (Cuban crisis) • Khrushchev falls in 1964 • Leonid Brezhnev comes to power (as General Secretary of CPSU), period of “stagnation”
Khrushchev, Brezhnev • Nikita Khrushchev,(1894-1971,First. Sec. CPSU,53-64) • Leonid Brezhnev (1906-82,Gen. Sec. CPSU, 64-82)
Some very basic historical background, VI • Brezhnev dies in 1982 • In rapid succession Andropov and then Chernenko • New generation comes to power with the accession to position of General Secretary of Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985
Some very basic historical background, VII • With Gorbachev comes reform, uncertainty, and the disintegration of many long-established features of Soviet life • Glasnost’ and perestroika • August 1991 – an attempted coup, the failure of which led directly to the disintegration of the Soviet Union by the end of the year • Gorbachev replaced by Boris Yeltsin as head of new Russian state
Stephen Kotkin, Armageddon Averted Identity of the author • Stephen Kotkin, distinguished American historian (Princeton); has written and published extensively on Russia • His first major research project was on Magnitogorsk, a Urals steel town. • Provocative, original, challenges orthodoxies
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • What is Kotkin’s big question? • Why did it all happen peacefully? • What are his points of comparison with the west? • Decline of major industry, responses to economic change.
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • What masked the decline (and fuels the Russian economy now)?
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • What did the Second World War do to the USSR (in contrast to Japan and Germany)?
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • What is Kotkin’s story of the Brezhnev years (Leonid Brezhnev, 1905-1982; General Secretary of the CPSU 1966-1982) • What came after him and why?
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • How does Kotkin see Gorbachev? • And why? • What is significant about Gorbachev’s background and experience?
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • When the Union collapsed, what did the citizens of Russia want, according to Kotkin? • Did they get it – and if not, why not?
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • Changes in the economy and politics of capitalism made it impossible for the USSR to compete • Generational change brought to power a dedicated believer, who thought he could transform the country peacefully • Soviet institutions themselves facilitated disintegration, but bloodless disintegration
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • The West is wrong to claim the credit for the disintegration of the Union, and wrong to blame itself for the subsequent “failure of reform”. • Sovietologists, left and right, got it wrong (the Soviet Union could not be transformed without disintegration; the CPSU did produce a serious reform movement)
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • What did we have at the beginning of the C21st (when Kotkin finished his book)? • A country still in need of many reforms, and of good government; economic struggles, but a booming metropolis; a leader who seems to understand (as his immediate predecessors did not) that Russia is not in a position to make great-power claims.
Contrasting images of Russia at the beginning of the new century Top left – Japanese restaurant with view of Kremlin, Moscow; top right, family at the table, village of Koshtugi (Vologda region); bottom left, main road from Vytegra to Kargopol’ (border of Vologda and Archangel regions, October 02); bottom right, road in cottage community, near resort for members of Presidential administration, Moscow region
So what happened next? • Russia puts the “R” in BRIC. • Russia’s oil and gas boom, enriching the country (even reaching beyond the elites) and giving the country new political clout. • An increasingly re-centralized, more authoritarian political structure. • More and more positive revisionism about the Soviet past, a very strong, state-encouraged, discourse of national patriotism. • Clear evidence that Russia wants to assert itself in the world again. • Government control over corporate structures and the economic elite. • Very little prospect for integration into European economic and other entities, as Kotkin suggested might help. • Russia’s political assertiveness seen regionally (Ukraine, Georgia), continentally (gas disputes, the Lugovoi affair), and globally (missiles, naval power, role in Iran, Middle East disputes, relations with USA) • Continued demographic change and population decline • Continued growth of the key cities, agricultural disintegration, decline of many provincial cities
Kotkin, Armageddon Averted • And what is still, as Kotkin suggested, the most unpredictable element for the future (now not only in terms of politics, but also economics)?