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Russia

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Title: Russia


1
Russia Exam Part A
  • Or, how to succeed in analysis by really trying

2
  • Glenn Matthews
  • Melbourne
  • Grammar School

3
  • The examination is worth 50 of total study score
  • School study scores (SAC marks) are worth 50 and
    are moderated against the examination and the GAT
  • The examination is 2 hours in duration
  • PLUS
  • 15 minutes reading time

4
SECTION A Revolution 1 Part 1 AOS 1 2
extended responses of 12 lines each worth 10
marks Q. 1 Q. 2 10 10 20 Part 2 AOS
2 Analysis of short document, commentary or
interpretation Q. 3 a, b, c, d, e 2 2 6
10 20 SECTION B Revolution 2 Part 1 AOS
1 Extended response to a document, image or
commentary Q. 4 a, b, c, d, e, 2 2 6 10
20 Part 2 AOS 2 Essay question One
question for each revolution (they are a bit
different this year) (69 lines or less) 20
5
Area of Study One
  • Revolutionary Ideas, Leaders, Movement and
    Events.
  • When
  • The period for this area of study is
  • Russian Revolution 1905 to October 1917 (Bloody
    Sunday to the Bolshevik Revolution)

6
What?
  • The collapse of the old regime in the following
    terms
  • Political
  • Economic
  • Social
  • Cultural
  • Institutional
  • Everyday
  • Values
  • (PESCIEV)

7
Why?
  • Historians have put forward different theories
    about the causes of revolution for example,
  • inadequate response to structural change,
  • political divisions,
  • the failure of rising expectations
  • the loss of authority
  • the erosion of confidence in the old order.

8
More Why
  • Why did social tensions and ideological conflicts
    increase in the pre-revolutionary period?
  • Why could social tensions and ideological
    conflicts not be contained within the traditional
    order?
  • What events or circumstances eroded confidence in
    the government or weakened capacity of the ruling
    class to meet challenges to its authority?
  • How important were ideas, leaders or movements in
    explaining why the revolution happened? Think
    about Marxism and Leninism versus Liberalism in
    the Russian Rev.
  • How important was Lenin in bringing about the
    success of the revolution?
  • Why do some historians focus more on
    circumstances and longer term developments as the
    main contributors to revolution and determinants
    of the course it would take?

9
Key Knowledge
  • The chronology of key events and factors which
    contributed to the revolution.
  • The causes of tensions and conflicts generated in
    the old regime that many historians see as
    contributing to the revolution for example
  • rising and unfulfilled class expectations
  • fluctuations in economic activity
  • failed attempts at economic, social or political
    reform
  • perceived social or economic inequality or lack
    of political voice
  • the impact of war or economic crisis that
    contributed to revolution
  • the social and economic impact of WWI on Tsarist
    Russia
  • The ideas and ideologies utilised in
    revolutionary struggle Marxist ideas in the
    Russian Revolution
  • The role of revolutionary individuals and groups
    in bringing about change, for example in Russia
    Kerensky, Trotsky, Lenin and the Socialist
    Revolutionaries, Bolsheviks and the Mensheviks.

10
Key Skills
  • Document the chronological events that
    contributed to the revolution.
  • analyse information about the causes of tension
    and conflict in the Old Regime that contributed
    to revolution
  • Analyse the ideas that were utilised in the
    revolutionary struggle
  • Analyse a range of historical evidence to
    evaluate the role of revolutionary individuals
    and groups in bringing about change.
  • Synthesise evidence to develop a coherent
    argument about the role of revolutionary ideas,
    leaders movements and events in the development
    of the revolution.
  • Consider a range of historians interpretations

11
For success you need
  • Good knowledge of both areas of study of both
    revolutions
  • Understanding of what the examiners are looking
    for (examination criteria)
  • Clear, succinct writing style including accurate
    spelling (especially of specific terms and
    terminology of study guide) and punctuation
  • Legible writing
  • Lots of practice at analysis of graphics and
    texts and writing of short essays
  • Lots of practice at doing sample papers and
    questions in time limit

12
The Criteria
  • The examination paper will address all the
    criteria. All students will be examined against
    each criterion.
  • Understanding and appropriate use of historical
    terms, concepts, commentaries and interpretations
  • Application of evidence to support arguments and
    conclusions
  • Knowledge of the commencement, ongoing
    development and/or consolidation of the
    revolution
  • Knowledge of key events, factors, individuals
    and/or groups influencing the revolution and its
    consolidation
  • Analysis of the revolutionary struggle and the
    creation of a new society
  • Evaluation of change in the revolution

13
Historical terms
  • political, social, economic, institution,
    ideology, every day values, cultural, traditional
    order, new order, rising expectations tension,
    crises, conflict, consensus, stability,
    radicalisation, foreign intervention,
    consolidation of revolution,

14
Concepts
  • Class, equality, freedom, poverty, change,
    continuity, autocracy, democracy, socialism,
    communism, anarcho-syndicalism, dictatorship of
    the proletariat, Dialectical Materialism
    totalitarianism, Marxist Leninism, Leadership,
    psychopath, violence, criminality, Revolution!

15
Commentaries
  • memoirs (memories of the events recorded at a
    later time), observations about events made at
    the time by people who did not see everything
    that they wrote about e.g.
  • John Reed Ten Days that Shook the World
  • Emma Goldmans writings.

16
Historians interpretations.
  • There is a large range of these.
  • Keep it simple and concentrate on Soviet view
    versus other views.
  • In this Stalinist view the Bolsheviks led the
    masses to glorious revolution, and everything
    they did was right.
  • It takes the Bolshevik view to the next level of
    propaganda and does some serious editing of the
    historical record.
  • Anti Soviet views cover the whole spectrum from
    Trotsky to Pipes.
  • Dont get too worried about the differences
    just hammer the soviet view.

17
The Stalinist, Soviet View
18
Leon Trotsky Bolshevik View
  • Young Trotsky
  • A four of a kind son of a bitch, but the
    greatest Jew since Jesus Christ
  • The American Ambassador

19
E. H. Carr
  • Pro Bolshevik View

20
The Exam
  • Examiners report and exams from 2005 onwards are
    available in full on the VCAA website.
  • Just Alta Vista Victorian Curriculum Assessment
    Authority Revolutions

21
Dos and Donts
  • Look at old exam papers so that you are familiar
    with them, the layout, the requirements. Find
    them at the VCAA website
  • Know what you have to do in Part A and Part B
    (what do you have to do?)
  • How many marks do you get if you do the same rev
    twice?
  • What happens when you do two revs per section?
  • Do write in black pen dont write in pencil -
    this can be difficult for assessors to read.

22
Dos and Donts
  • Strategy dont necessarily do first question
    first. I would start with the documents and then
    go back to the 10 mark questions.
  • Reading comprehension, gets the intellectual
    juices flowing, gives you something concrete to
    get underway with,
  • can come straight out of reading to answering the
    questions
  • Dont have to reread.
  • Think about what you are going to write and jot
    some points down
  • Problem is not filling the page but not filling
    it too quickly with words that lack concision and
    sentences that simply dont say enough.
  • You have plenty to say you really need to plan
    a response so that you answer the question
    properly

23
The Exam
  • Section A Part 1

24
Examiners Report
  • GENERAL COMMENTS
  • In 2008 assessors found a significant reduction
    in students factual knowledge and skill in
    working with documents and visual representations
    as evidence of the period.
  • Poor handwriting and control of expression was
    prevalent it would be useful for students to
    practise writing neatly in defined spaces and to
    learn to spell terms accurately.
  • Teachers should also remind students that pencil
    is not to be used in examinations.
  • There were still a number of answers in dot point
    format students cannot obtain full marks when
    answers are presented in this way.

25
2008 Examiners report
  • Quite a number of students still made errors in
    their selection of options and wrote on the same
    revolution in both parts of the paper. This
    mistake meant students lost marks for one of the
    sections.
  • As in the past the discriminating part of the
    paper was the response to the document and visual
    representation questions.
  • Some students seemed unaware that they needed to
    use the extract or visual representation by
    direct reference to it and also use both their
    own knowledge and knowledge of historians views.

26
Examiners Report
  • Russia
  • Knowledge of the October Manifesto was very good.
    Most students showed knowledge of the fundamental
    laws, and detailed knowledge of the failure of
    the Dumas and how this contributed to growing
    frustration.
  • Question 2 on the actions of the Provisional
    Government was also handled well and students
    showed very good ability in explaining a sequence
    of events in the development of the revolution.

27
The opening salvoes
  • These first questions are relatively short, but
    tricky because you have to squeeze in a heck of a
    lot.
  • Use relevant information dont use irrelevant
    information.
  • The chief examiner is interested in language use
    in this section.
  • She wants to see that you are using language
    properly to show us that you understand the
    sequence of events that contributed to the
    revolution.

28
Section A Part 1
  • Generally students used factual information well
    but the cues in the question to make judgements
    (how did explain the importance of
    contribute to a revolutionary situation in
    the development of the revolution) were often
    overlooked by students.
  • Many students tended to just list or narrate
    whatever they knew about the topic.
  • The better answers showed an ability to link the
    evidence to the question and respond to the cue
    of how did.
  • Correct and specific historical terminology was
    evident in the best answers.

29
Section A Part 1
  • The best answers delivered an argument, as was
    required by the wording of the question, and
    delivered points chronologically.
  • Overall, successful responses identified three or
    four clear points about the event or actions and
    developed an argument using precise factual
    information such as names, dates and statistics
    that were linked to the question, often using
    specific terms to indicate a relationship between
    points rather than merely implying a connection.

30
Section A Part 1
  • Better students demonstrated an understanding
    that revolution is a developing process.
  • Medium level responses tended to have some
    accuracy, perhaps showing the students ability
    to use one piece of statistical information or
    other form of factual knowledge. They were
    general in content and loosely controlled. There
    may have been only two main ideas, which were
    described in loose terms, and other ideas were
    less relevant or of lower significance. These
    responses sometimes wandered from the timeframe
    or lacked relevance.
  • Less successful answers often used only one or
    two points and expanded on them, while others
    simply developed a narrative.

31
2007 Exam
  • Russia 1905.October 1917
  • Using three or four points, explain how Russias
    involvement in World War I contributed to the
    abdication of Tsar Nicholas II by January 1917.
    Provide evidence to support your answer.

32
Section A Part 1 Russia
  • Knowledge of the effect of WWI on Russia was
    generally well evidenced.
  • Students mainly included three main factors
    leading to the abdication of the Tsar
  • He took charge of the army
  • Alexandra was left in charge of Russia
  • The influence of Rasputin.
  • The degree of precise factual detail often
    differentiated between those students who
    received a high score and those who received a
    medium score. Other information that could have
    been used included economic factors related to
    the war ie problems of supply
  • Demoralisation and lack of belief in the current
    system
  • The following is an example of a medium level
    response to Question 1.

33
2007 Student Response - Medium
  • Once Tsar Nicholas II involved Russia in World
    War 1 his country was plagued by problems, many
    of which lead to his abdication in January 1917.
    Firstly, by assuming command of his own army, any
    defeats at the front would hold him directly
    responsible and easy prey to Bolshevik
    propaganda. Secondly, by leaving the capital in
    the hands of Tsarina Alexandra and the mysterious
    Rasputin he was gambling Tsarist Russias future
    in the face of revolutionists such as Lenin and
    Kerensky. Not only this, but the resources poured
    into the war was astronomically considering many
    peasants were still awaiting peace, bread,
    land three things Lenin would later offer.
    Seeing the Tsar had engaged Russia in a foreign
    war and had literally (and symbolically) left
    Petrograd many of the proletariat saw this as a
    time for radical change. And seeing they made up
    82 of the population, once Nicholas didnt have
    your support he was forced to abdicate and finish
    the 300 year old Romonov dynasty.

34
Part 1 Second Question 2008
  • c. Russia 1905October 1917
  • Using three or four points, explain how the
    formation of the Provisional Government in
    February 1917 contributed to the development of
    the Russian Revolution. Provide evidence to
    support your answer.

35
High Ranking Answer 2008
  • In February 1917 leaders of the fourth Duma
    formed the Provisional Government and forced the
    Tsar to abdicate. Under the leadership of Prince
    Lvov, they issued liberal democratic reforms
    which included freedom of speech and the release
    of all revolutionaries. This amnesty was a
    mistake as it allowed revolutionaries like Lenin
    to return from exile and to resume contributing
    to the revolutionary situation. Their second
    mistake was the continuance of the war, which was
    extremely unpopular among the people and resulted
    in a loss of support for the new regime. They
    instead turned to the Soviets, resulting in a
    period of Dual Government, where the
    Provisional Government held authority but no
    power and the Soviets, power but no authority.

36
High Ranking Answer 2008
  • This was evident in the Kornilov attack in August
    where Kerensky armed the Soviets so they could
    protect Petrograd from Kornilovs soldiers. This
    Dual Government created great political
    instability as it allowed the Bolsheviks to build
    support during September with a majority in the
    Moscow Soviet. Now armed, courtesy of Kerensky,
    Trotsky formed the Red Guard and Military
    Revolutionary Committee in preparation for armed
    insurrection. After gaining confidence in the
    Provisional governments weakness and their own
    popularity, the Bolsheviks seized power in the
    name of the Soviets on the 25th of October 1917.
    The formation of the Provisional Government in
    February 1917 was to be followed by a series of
    mistakes made, which contributed to the
    development of the revolution by all other
    parties being able to exploit these weaknesses.
    The Bolsheviks would eventually be able to
    exploit these weaknesses and successfully stage
    the October Revolution in 1917.

37
Di explains it for yuz
  • Typically, the medium range responses had some
    accuracy, showing the ability to identify perhaps
    one or two pieces of information. They were
    general in content and loosely controlled. There
    might have been only two main ideas, which were
    described in loose terms and other ideas might
    have been less relevant or of lower significance.
    They sometimes wandered from the time frame or
    slipped in relevance. There was little
    demonstration of the pathway to revolution.

38
Section A Part Two Creating a New Society
  • Document Analysis -though it could be a graphic
    or a commentary now.

39
What students did last year
  • Students demonstrated good ability to read and
    comprehend basic information in the documents.
    There was less skill in analysing the views
    expressed.
  • Students may benefit from practise writing short
    summaries of the viewpoint contained in the
    extracts.
  • Students do not need to know the school to which
    a historian belongs, rather they should know what
    the historian is saying about the revolution.

40
  • The majority of students were able to identify
    the relevant information directly from the
    document to answer the two questions. However, it
    was clear that students were not using the
    document by quoting from it to frame their answer
    in Questions 3c-d. It is a requirement to quote
    from the extract.
  • Question 3c. was accessible to most students.
    Weaker answers told a story of events rather than
    explaining in the context of the document, using
    it, as well as including several pieces of
    additional information. Improvement is needed in
    reading the question and identifying what to
    focus on.

41
Gettin it Rong
  • Question 3d. was poorly done. Students seemed to
    either repeat knowledge already presented or
    compare historians.
  • They did not tackle the strengths and
    limitations of the document as evidence and at
    times referred to the strengths and weaknesses of
    the event itself. There was a lot of dumping of
    learned quotes that lacked relevance to the
    context of the document and question. A typical
    weak statement was, for example, this is written
    by a historian and not someone who experienced
    the event first hand and therefore it is bias.
  • Students should also learn how to use the terms
    bias and biased correctly.

42
  • High-scoring responses used outside factual
    knowledge to illuminate ideas presented in the
    document. Medium and weak responses either did
    not move beyond information contained in the
    document and did little more than describe or
    paraphrase the content, or on the other hand,
    they ignored the document and simply expressed
    their own knowledge.
  • Most students made a generalised attempt to
    analyse the view but they must identify specific
    words in the document that provide clues to the
    position held by the author. The best approach is
    one where a historians viewpoint is explained
    and the response shows how it differs from, or
    confirms, the ideas expressed in the extract.

43
Russia 1917 to 1924 Death of Lenin
  • Figes, Orlando, A Peoples Tragedy, pp. 613614
  • What about the argument that War Communism was a
    response to the exigencies of the civil war?
    To be sure, the Bolsheviks, like all the wartime
    governments in Europe at this time, were trying
    to control the economy in the military interests
    of the state . . . But War Communism was not just
    a response to the civil war it was also a means
    of making civil war. The civil war was not fought
    only on the battlefields. It was a fundamental
    aspect of the Bolsheviks revolutionary strategy,
    and was also fought on what they called the
    internal front, in society and the economy,
    through the policies of War Communism. Unless one
    acknowledges this fundamental fact that the
    policies of War Communism were seen by the
    Bolsheviks as an instrument of struggle against
    their social or internal enemies it is
    impossible to explain why these policies were
    kept in place for more than a year after the
    White armies had been defeated. The case for War
    Communism as inspired by ideology is also
    insufficient. Certainly, the Bolsheviks were all
    united by a fundamental belief in the possibility
    of using state coercion to effect the transition
    to socialism in a backward peasant country such
    as Russia. This was the essence of their
    ideology. They also shared a deeply ingrained
    mistrust of the market which could be defined as
    ideological. Foreign socialists were shocked by
    the violence of the Bolsheviks hatred of free
    trade. The Bolsheviks did not just want to
    regulate the market as did the socialists and
    most of the wartime governments of Europe they
    wanted to abolish it.
  • urgent demands

44
The questions
  • a. Identify the two Bolshevik goals of War
    Communism as stated in the extract.
  • i.
  • ii.
  • 2 marks
  • b. Identify from the extract two internal types
    of battle necessary for the victory of the
    Revolution within Russia.
  • i.
  • ii.
  • 2 marks

45
The Questions
  • c. Using your own knowledge and the extract,
    explain how the policy of War Communism operated
    in practice 6 Marks
  • d. Explain the strengths and limitations of this
    extract as evidence to explain the Bolshevik
    victory in the Civil War from 1918 to 1921. In
    your response refer to different views of War
    Communism.

46
Section A Part Two Analysis of a document
  • Content
  • It is important to identify relevant information
    from the document in this section.
  • Questions a and b
  • Keep in mind that these are meant to be easy
    questions. That is important. If they are meant
    to be easy, then the answer should be easy to
    find, not tricky or puzzling. The simplest
    response will be the right one here so dont make
    things too complex.

47
Section A Part Two
  • Questions c. and d. were more difficult and
    distinguished the high-performing students. In
    order to be successful in these questions,
    students needed to, firstly, use the extract by
    directly referring to parts of it to explain your
    answer and, secondly, use your own knowledge in
    part c. and d and evidence from historians in
    part d.

48
Cfor Context
  • Overall, students should start by referring to
    the document, noting its date, who produced it
    and the reasons why it was produced.
  • Placing it against a historical background is
    necessary in order to develop and explain the
    rest of the answer.
  • High-scoring responses used outside factual
    knowledge and combined this with ideas presented
    by the document.
  • Medium and weaker responses either did not move
    beyond information contained in the document,
    doing little more than describing or paraphrasing
    the content, or ignored the document and just
    expressed the students own knowledge.

49
More C
  • Most students made a generalised attempt to
    analyse the view presented but they must identify
    specific words in the document, which are clues
    to the experiences or difficulties in the
    historical period, and use these clues for a
    focussed explanation.
  • They must also provide specific factual
    information.

50
Function
  • The question on historiography, d., was attempted
    by most students and most students were at least
    able to refer to historiographical schools.
    Many students adopted an approach that showed
    good scaffolding of their answers.
  • They addressed the question, demonstrated an
    understanding of the context and timeframe by
    referring to events and factual information,
    identified and explained strengths and historians
    that may agree and then explained limitations and
    which historians might agree.
  • Providing contrasting historical viewpoints was a
    strength of such answers.
  • Students are strongly discouraged from merely
    producing an outline of the perspective of
    particular historical schools without referring
    to the document material. Better answers do not
    need to label historians, and labels such as
    liberal, soviet, libertarian etc., are to
    be discouraged because they do not demonstrate
    real understanding of a particular view.

51
Pipes and Bush
  • Pipes is a right-wing liberal historian.
  • Bush is history.

52
Orlando Figes
  • Orlando Figes liberal, revisionist but dont
    worry about that stuff too much. It is what he
    says rather than the label that matters.

53
Sheila Fitzpatrick
  • Sheila Fitzpatrick Social Historian, but dont
    worry too much about that. Concentrate on what
    she says rather than concerning yourself too much
    with the finer points of historiographical
    perspective.

54
  • This is also Sheila Fitzpatrick

55
Another Sheila F.
  • Do not trust the views of this particular Sheila
    Fitzpatrick.

56
Historiography
  • It is much better to know what a historian said
    about an event, incident, person, period of
    history and the evidence they use to support your
    view.
  • Therefore students need to practise measuring
    views expressed in documents against historians
    or contemporaries views of particular events.

57
How the questions were answered
  • Students had little difficulty with the short
    questions. Responses to Question 3c. showed that
    most students had good knowledge of the way War
    Communism functioned, although surprisingly, many
    answers did not show precise knowledge of the use
    of terror.

58
The Tricky Stuff
  • It appeared that Question 3d. presented many
    students with problems because they did not
    answer the question aboutBolshevik victory in
    the Civil War. Instead students wrote again
    about War Communism or Civil War but did not
    write about alternative reasons for victory
    outside of Bolshevik actions. Many students
    simply delivered a comparison of views about War
    Communism. Students must pay attention to the
    question and break it down. A surprising number
    of students claimed that the limitation of the
    piece was that the historian ignored the violence
    of the Cheka. Students should be aware of the
    historians work as a whole since Figes devotes
    much space to discussion of the brutality of the
    Cheka. Students should have been able to grasp
    that Figes argues the duality of the policies
    surrounding War Communism, which he says were not
    only a means of fighting the war against external
    enemies but also a means of targeting
    counter-revolutionaries. Following is an example
    of a high level answer to Question 3c. The
    response does both things required by the
    question it quotes from the extract and uses
    additional knowledge to discuss how War Communism
    operated.

59
High Level Response for C
  • War Communism was introduced in 1918 to keep the
    army supplied during Civil War 1918-1921. It did
    so by placing Russia under a command economy
    where the state directly influenced the economy
    as Figes states, in the military interests of
    the state. This was achieved by the
    nationalisation of all banks, businesses and
    factories and grain requisitions. These grain
    requisitions were carried out by the cheka, who
    used force to collect the grain from peasants.
    Due to food shortage peasants were hoarding their
    grain, however due to War Communisms
    requisitions over 7 million died due to
    starvation. Through the use of violence the
    Bolsheviks succeeded in keeping the army supplied
    but this was done at the expense of their
    popularity among the people.

60
2007 Part D
  • The following is a medium level response to
    Question d. This answer starts strongly with the
    extract and the student attempts to
    contextualise however, the response then falls
    into a discussion of historians views without
    linking them to the extract.

61
Medium Level Response for d.
  • The extract displays Lenins passion and desire
    to strive for his goals. This extract can provide
    some insight into the extreme lengths taken, such
    as the violent role of the Cheka or the extreme
    reaction to Kronstadt. Figes and Pipes both
    describe the Terror as a tragedy, as Figes book
    title says A Peoples Tragedy although Pipes
    takes a much more conservative viewpoint and far
    more anti Bolshevik and therefore anti Terror,
    whereas Figes accepts the socialist views, but
    condemns the terror. Pipes is more influenced by
    the American conservatism or reds under the
    bed. There are few weaknesses in this extract to
    explain the terror, it is an extreme and in a way
    of lexicon, violent extract, with the emphasis on
    parasites.

62
Appendix - Earlier Examples
  • 2005 Exam

63
2005 Richard Pipes
  • Russia November 19171924 death of Lenin
  • Pipes on Lenins attitude to the Russian civil
    war
  • To Lenin it the civil war meant the global
    class conflict between his party, the vanguard of
    the proletariat, and the international
    bourgeoisie class war in the most
    comprehensive sense of the term, of which the
    military conflict was only one dimension. He not
    only expected civil war to break out immediately
    after his taking power, but took power in order
    to unleash it. For him the October coup détat
    would have been a futile adventure if it did not
    lead to a global class conflict. Ten years before
    the revolution, analysing the lessons of the
    Paris Commune, Lenin agreed with Marx that its
    collapse was caused by its failure to launch a
    civil war. From the moment the World War broke
    out, Lenin denounced pacifistic socialists who
    called for an end to the fighting. True
    revolutionaries did not want peace This is a
    slogan of philistines and priests. The
    proletarian slogan must be civil war. Civil
    war is the expression of revolution . . . wrote
    Bukharin and Preobrazhenskii in a widely read
    manual of Communism. Trotsky put it even more
    bluntly Soviet authority is organised civil
  • war. From such pronouncements it should be
    evident that the civil war was not forced on the
    Communist leaders by the foreign and domestic
    bourgeoisie it lay at the heart of their
    political program.
  • Reference Richard Pipes, Russia Under the
    Bolshevik Regime, 19191924, pp. 56

64
QandA
  • a. Name two things civil war meant to Lenin
    according to Pipes.
  • the beginning of global class conflict between
    his party, the vanguard of the proletariat, and
    the international bourgeoisie
  • ii. class war in the most comprehensive sense
    of the term, of which the military conflict was
    only one dimension.
  • 2 marks

65
QandA
  • b. What two reasons are given by Pipes that Lenin
    regarded the October coup détat as futile
    without civil war?
  • i. The survival of the revolution - analysing the
    lessons of the Paris Commune, Lenin agreed with
    Marx that its collapse was caused by its failure
    to launch a civil war.
  • ii. Took power in order to unleash it civil
    war.
  • 2 marks

66
The responses
  • Strangely, weaker students sometimes did better
    on these questions. They knew little so relied on
    the document entirely and often got it right. It
    is after all just reading comprehension.
  • Stronger students were sometimes inclined to
    write from their own knowledge and ended up with
    less well directed answers.

67
The Context question
  • Using your own knowledge and the extract, explain
  • why the Bolshevik government supported the civil
    war
  • Lenin drew on lessons from Paris Commune which
    collapsed due to lack of Civil War.
  • He took power in order to unleash it.
  • Provided a chance for Lenin to use Trotsky, the
    Red Army and Dzerzhinskys Cheka to defeat White
    Armies of Denikin, Wrangel, Yudenich, Kolchak and
    other internal opposition and consolidate power.

68
The Context second question
  • ii. why Pipes says the Bolshevik governments
    support for the civil war lay at the heart of
    their political
  • program.
  • For Pipes, violence was all they really
    understood
  • Trotskys direct statement that Soviet authority
    is organised civil war.
  • For Pipes, the Lenin, Trotsky, Sverdlov and the
    other Bolsheviks were violent thugs, so war is
    just Bolshevism flying its true colours notes
    elsewhere the summary executions, intolerance of
    opposition, concentration camps and generally
    repressive policies and corrupt abuse of power
  • Could with some justification argue that their
    political program contained little else, judged
    on the failure of War Communism in political and
    economic terms.
  • 3 3 6 marks

69
Historiographical question
  • Explain the usefulness of this extract in
    understanding the role of the civil war in
    establishing a new political order and a new
    society up to 1920.
  • We now have terms like strengths and weakness, or
    significance in this section.

70
Historiography
  • This is an invitation to engage with
    historiography.
  • The first 3 or 4 lines should be directed at a
    Pipes versus others line of discussion.
  • You must then move on to the things suggested by
    the document and address yourself to the question
    of the New Society and the role of the civil war
    and hence leaders like Lenin, Trotsky, the Red
    Army, War Communism, the Cheka, the White Army
    and assess how useful this document is to helping
    us understand these elements.
  • A document should always be partially, never
    wholly useful or useless.
  • Show that you have skills in evaluation.Show your
    awareness of its strengths and weaknesses and
    other points of view.

71
Historiography
  • Show us some HISTORY. Ie
  • Names of the leaders of the White Armies
    Kolchak, Yudenich, Denikin, Wrangel, Kornilov.
  • The Foreign Intervention by USA, Britain, Japan
    etc
  • An understanding of Trotskys role leading,
    rallying and organising the Red Army from his
    train.
  • War Communism, the failure of grain
    requisitioning, the collapse of the economy, the
    antagonism of the population to both sides.
  • How Bolsheviks misrepresent themselves as in
    control lurched from crisis to crisis.
  • War Communism a retrospective term
  • Show the limitations and strengths of the source.
    How Pipes understates Bolshevik support at
    least 25 as a minimum they had mass backing for
    their policies
  • Why is the source incomplete?
  • Pipes is a committed anti-Bolshevist. Liberal
    Historians tend to concentrate on individual
    decision makers

72
Historiography
  • Lenin viewed as weak, lying and bent on violence
    and destruction.
  • Whose view (in socioeconomic terms) is reflected.
  • We know it shows only one view you must go
    further to indicate what views are not shown.
  • Ie The Liberal View of Pipes attacks the Soviet
    view of Lenin and the Bolsheviks, but lacks the
    understanding of the masses of social historians
    like Read, Fitzpatrick or Christian, which means
    that, as Wheatcroft points out, the Bolshevik
    domination of the Soviets and their mass support
    is completely discounted.

73
Sample Response
  • This extract is limited in its usefulness, as it
    is written as an interpretation of Lenins psyche
    from a Liberal perspective. Liberal historians
    generally concentrate on the revolution from
    above and tend to ignore the influence of the
    people in establishing the new order. As a
    Liberal historian, Pipes is obviously bised
    against the communist ideas of Lenin and
    therefore focuses on his and the Bolsheviks
    political program and does not acknowledge the
    tactfulness and sheer determination that other
    historians may credit Lenin for. Though Pipes
    points out Lenins apparent agenda for civil
    war, he fails to recognise the underlying
    political factors that influenced the people of
    Russia to deal with threats of counter-revolution
    from royalists and moderates alike.

74
Another Sample
  • The extract is useful as it presents key
    Bolshevik leaders views on the role of the civil
    war in consolidating their power. It displays the
    militaristic and violent nature of the party and
    consequently, the new political order. It also
    implies that violence was a key aspect of shaping
    the new society. This extract however, does not
    include factors such as economic pressure and
    social discontent that also played a vital role
    in determining the new society. Although not
    affecting the militaristic nature, it does not
    account for the impact of War Communism that
    undermined the support for a socialist state, nor
    the growing unpopularity of the Bolsheviks that
    pressured for a change from the communist ideals.
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