kk Flashcards
(4 cards)
1
Q
Intro
A
Introduction (Plan)
- Define “rise to power”: Stalin’s consolidation of control over the Communist Party after Lenin’s death (1924–1929)
- Define “significance”: Led to shift from collective leadership to personal dictatorship; shaped USSR’s direction
- Argument: Stalin’s rise was due to a combination of political cunning, exploitation of structural weaknesses, and missteps by rivals. His success had major consequences for the USSR’s leadership style and future policies
- Structure:
- Stalin’s political manipulation and Party positions
- Weaknesses of rivals and Stalin’s exploitation of ideology
- Consequences/significance of his rise
2
Q
B 1
A
Main Point: Stalin used his Party positions and organisational control to outmanoeuvre rivals.
- Stalin = General Secretary (1922) → control of membership, promotions, agenda
- Used Lenin’s death (1924) to promote Lenin cult and suppress Testament
- Promoted idea of “Socialism in One Country” (1924) – appealed to party after civil war exhaustion
- Built alliances: Triumvirate with Kamenev and Zinoviev against Trotsky
- Replaced allies when convenient (e.g. United Opposition in 1926 → purged)
Historiography:
-
Isaac Deutscher (Marxist): Stalin was “the organising genius of the Party machine” → shows his administrative power, not just ideology, won control
- Comment: Highlights that Stalin’s rise was bureaucratic and strategic, not inevitable
-
Stephen Kotkin (revisionist): “He was not a master puppeteer; he outworked, out-positioned, and outlived his rivals.”
- Comment: Emphasises that Stalin’s success was grounded in opportunism and effort, not pre-planning
Stats/Facts:
- By 1928, Stalin had full control over Politburo
- Controlled Party Secretariat → appointments = ~50,000 positions
3
Q
B 2
A
Body Paragraph 2: Rivals’ weaknesses & ideological flexibility
Main Point: Stalin succeeded because his rivals underestimated him and he used ideological debates tactically.
- Trotsky: brilliant but arrogant, failed to build alliances; absent during Lenin’s funeral
- Zinoviev/Kamenev: opposed Lenin in 1917 → used against them
- Stalin switched sides in debates: NEP vs industrialisation; World Revolution vs Socialism in One Country
- Appealed to Party centrists; portrayed rivals as “factionalists” against unity
Historiography:
-
Dmitri Volkogonov (post-Soviet): Trotsky “lost to a man he despised… because he failed to understand power as Stalin did.”
- Comment: Suggests Stalin’s real strength was understanding the system and exploiting underestimation
-
E.H. Carr (orthodox): “Stalin’s doctrine was whatever would increase his hold on power.”
- Comment: Highlights Stalin’s ideological flexibility as a tool rather than belief
Facts/Stats:
- Lenin’s Testament (1922): Criticised Stalin but suppressed by Zinoviev & Kamenev
- Trotsky expelled (1927) → exiled (1929)
- Bukharin removed from Politburo (1929) after Stalin turned on NEP
4
Q
BP 3
A
Body Paragraph 3: Significance of his rise to power
Main Point: Stalin’s victory marked the end of collective leadership and start of authoritarianism, paving the way for purges, collectivisation, and totalitarianism
- End of Lenin’s idea of collective leadership
- Enabled radical break: Five-Year Plans (1928), forced collectivisation, political terror
- Created a cult of personality around Stalin
- Long-term effects: structure of dictatorship solidified by 1929
Historiography:
-
Orlando Figes (revisionist): Stalin’s rise “transformed Bolshevism from a revolutionary party into a bureaucratic dictatorship.”
- Comment: Shows that Stalin’s power shift was not just personal but institutional
-
Robert Conquest (liberal/conservative): “Stalin’s rise was a tragedy, not a necessity.”
- Comment: Frames Stalin’s rule as a deviation from revolutionary ideals, with tragic consequences
Facts/Stats:
- 1928: Stalin initiates Five-Year Plan → central economic control
- By 1929, all major rivals expelled or silenced
- Cult of Personality begins to appear in propaganda