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A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924 (1996)

von Orlando Figes

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1,6941910,267 (4.21)71
Figes (geb. 1959), Professor für Geschichte, beginnt seine "Erzählung" mit der Hungersnot von 1891, als Öffentlichkeit und zaristische Autokratie aneinandergeraten wie nie zuvor. Er läßt sein gewaltiges Werk mit dem Tode Lenins enden, als die Grundlagen der neuen Diktatur gelegt sind. Mit dieser ausgedehnten Betrachtung gelingt es ihm besser als den meisten Historikern zuvor, die vielschichtigen Ursachen für die Revolutionen von 1917 zu zeigen, die Möglichkeiten, anderer Entwicklungen, die auf dem Wege dahin durchaus bestanden haben und die Auswirkungen der bolschewistischen Machtergreifung, die bis heute reichen. Immer wieder läßt er beteiligte Akteure aus allen Gesellschaftsschichten zu Wort kommen, vom Bauern bis zum Zaren. Dadurch werden Handlungen dieser Menschen, die letztendlich zur Tragödie des Volkes führten, verständlicher. Ein faszinierendes, äußerst gut lesbares Buch - Geschichtsschreibung auf höchstem Niveau. Es sollte überall vorhanden sein, denn ohne Kenntnis von Figes Meisterwerk, ist eine der bedeutendsten Zäsuren des 20. Jahrhunderts nicht zu verstehen. (1) (Claus Baumgart)… (mehr)
Kürzlich hinzugefügt vonprivate Bibliothek, almostalibrary, RBriones, KanataCat, ChrisByrd, CalvinJames, coxcabinbooks, morethanaman, russw3000
NachlassbibliothekenDavid Robert Jones
  1. 10
    Sonnenfinsternis von Arthur Koestler (GabrielF)
    GabrielF: Written in 1940, Darkness at Noon really takes you into the minds of the revolutionary generation during Stalin's purges. A People's Tragedy is a very readable, thorough and fascinating history of the revolution.
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Ótimo livro sobre a revolução russa se você tem interesse pelo diálogo entre os grandes escritores russos e a revolução de 17, além de suas opiniões privadas daquilo que a precedeu e a sucedeu. Perfeito livro se você tem interesse pelo diálogo entre Maxim Gorki e a revolução de 17, além de suas opiniões privadas daquilo que a precedeu e a sucedeu.

Figes (que eu só descobri agora que se pronuncia Faiges) faz um panorama muito detalhado e interessante do que levou à Revolução Russa. É difícil poder afirmar peremptório que fez uma análise imparcial, sem deixar detalhes relevantes de fora por causas outras quando não se é um especialista no assunto, mas Figes passa confiança. Tem suas opiniões, mas é até melhor que elas estejam bem claras.

O livro é fluido e tem aquele fatalismo britânico que é sempre adorável. Serve pra você poder sentir com mais propriedade a frustração de ver que ninguém que fala da revolução e do comunismo russo faz qualquer ideia de coisa alguma. ( )
  lui.zuc | Aug 31, 2021 |
Possibly my favourite history book. ( )
  morusss | Jan 23, 2019 |
De gran alcance, basado en una exhaustiva investigación original y escrito con pasión, habilidad narrativa y simpatía humana, A People's Tragedy es la versión definitiva de la Revolución Rusa para una nueva generación. ( )
  BibliotecaUNED | Oct 18, 2017 |
La revolución Rusa no es sólo uno de los acontecimientos más trascendentales del siglo XX, sino también, como demuestra Figes, un proceso histórico que alteró radicalmente la trayectoria de todo un pueblo y que influyó decisivamente en todo el mundo posterior. Mediante el empleo de la prensa, los diarios personales y la correspondencia de esas personas que hasta ahora permanecían en la sombra, Figes relata de un modo apasionante los grandes hitos de la Revolución, al tiempo nos ofrece una estremecedora imagen de la vida cotidiana de esa época. Con una admirable amplitud de miras, basándose en una investigación exhaustiva y rigurosa, y en un estilo narrativo de una intensidad asombrosa, Figes logra ofrecer a las nuevas generaciones el relato definitivo y omnicomprensivo de la Revolución Rusa. ( )
  BibliotecaUNED | Oct 10, 2017 |
While I was halfway through this, an ‘inspirational quote’ from Lenin happened to come up on my reddit feed. Something from one of those early speeches, about equality for all. I left a comment to suggest – I thought quite mildly – that it was, perhaps, ethically questionable to be quoting with approbation someone responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people – only to be downvoted into oblivion by other users. ‘You're probably thinking about Stalin,’ said one. ‘Fuck off,’ clarified another. ‘Lenin was actually very socially liberal, and kept his word about democracy for the people.’

This would be the same Lenin who shut down Russia's constituent assembly, who sidelined trade unions and had striking workers shot for desertion, who turned the country into a police state, built a chain of concentration camps and institutionalised terrorism as a matter of deliberate policy. Painful to see him held up as a beacon of humanitarianism by people who apparently haven't even understood Animal Farm. It's interesting, though, because even when I was growing up the far left was always quite cool in a way that the far right never was; its unelectability made it harmless, and it gained a certain cachet from its opposition to a string of unpopular Tory governments and by association with various cult figures like Morrissey or Alexi Sayle. It was always kind of a joke. People referred to each other with smiles as ‘fellow travellers’, ‘old Trots’ – and still do.

There was a feeling I had when I was reading this book; an uncomfortable, itchy feeling which made me fidget while I was reading, shift in my seat and scratch my nose or my neck every few minutes as I turned the pages. Eventually I realised what this sensation was: hatred. I just loathed the people responsible for prosecuting this grotesque experiment. Now I realise this is, of course, a pathetically inadequate response, but partly it came from a kind of surprise. A feeling that they had somehow got away with it, that their reputations are nowhere near as dismal as they should be. At one point, Orlando Figes offers in passing a suggestion as to why this might be so:

The Bolshevik programme was based on the ideals of the Enlightenment – it stemmed from Kant as much as from Marx – which makes Western liberals, even in this age of post-modernism, sympathise with it, or at least obliges us to try and understand it, even if we do not share its political goals; whereas the Nazi efforts to ‘improve mankind’, whether through eugenics or genocide, spat in the face of the Enlightenment and can only fill us with revulsion.

And perhaps there's something in this: inasmuch as reality has (in Stephen Colbert's words) a liberal bias; inasmuch as we are living, historically speaking, in a leftist world, there is a sense in which the Communist experiment seems like something that went wrong, not something that was wrong inherently. But the enormities of Lenin's politics were built-in ab initio; terror, Figes writes, was ‘implicit in the regime from the start…the resort to rule by terror was bound to follow from Lenin's violent seizure of power and his rejection of democracy’. And despite all the slogans of equality and democracy, the turnaround was much faster than I had ever realised.

None of the democratic organisations established before October 1917 survived more than a few years of Bolshevik rule, at least not in their democratic form. By 1921, if not earlier, the revolution had come full circle, and a new autocracy had been imposed on Russia which in many ways resembled the old one.

The thousand pages of Figes's history give plenty of scope for examining in detail what this meant for Russian citizens. It isn't pretty but it is instructive. There was the Civil War, with widespread terror on both sides; famine, exacerbated by shitty agricultural policy; and eventually the tightening grip of a one-party state. There are moments of acute revulsion and misery, alongside a recurring sense of absurdity: at one point, currency depreciation becomes so severe that it costs more to print the rouble than the rouble is actually worth; the post and telegraph service have to be made free because the state is losing money by printing and charging rouble notes for them. ‘The situation was surreal – but then this was Russia,’ Figes remarks, showing a grasp of the irony which this story demands.

Whole books have been written, of course, about the failure of the left outside Russia to accept the reality of what was happening there under Communism, or to blame it on a perversion of noble principles. What's so rewarding, and upsetting, and moving about this book is that it illustrates how naturally the consequences followed from the initial conditions, and how unimportant the political debate is compared with its effects on real people. There, as the title of the book suggests, Figes's summary is blunt.

Instead of being a constructive cultural force the revolution had virtually destroyed the whole of Russian civilisation; instead of human liberation it had merely brought human enslavement; and instead of the spiritual improvement of humanity it had led to degradation.

What makes it worse is that this whole catalogue of misery is in some sense being positioned only as a prelude. Looming up over the narrative is the lengthening shadow of the Georgian, Ioseb Jughashvili, alias Stalin, and where this book ends his story is just beginning.

Although this was written twenty years ago, in some ways it's become more relevant than ever, and not just because next year marks the revolution's centenary. In an impassioned final chapter, Figes calls for urgent reevaluation of the political capitalism of the West, pointing out that extremist rhetoric of the sort that fuelled the Bolshevik party is periodically going to prove popular ‘as long as the mass of the ordinary people remain alienated from the political system and feel themselves excluded from the benefits of the emergent capitalism. Perhaps even more worrying,’ he adds, ‘authoritarian nationalism has begun to fill the void…’ Is this sounding familiar to anybody? ( )
7 abstimmen Widsith | Oct 10, 2016 |
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Date de première publication :
1996 (1e édition originale anglaise)
- 2007-10-11 (1e traduction et édition française, Denoël)
- 2009-09-24 (Réédition française en 2 volumes poche, Folio, Gallimard)
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Figes (geb. 1959), Professor für Geschichte, beginnt seine "Erzählung" mit der Hungersnot von 1891, als Öffentlichkeit und zaristische Autokratie aneinandergeraten wie nie zuvor. Er läßt sein gewaltiges Werk mit dem Tode Lenins enden, als die Grundlagen der neuen Diktatur gelegt sind. Mit dieser ausgedehnten Betrachtung gelingt es ihm besser als den meisten Historikern zuvor, die vielschichtigen Ursachen für die Revolutionen von 1917 zu zeigen, die Möglichkeiten, anderer Entwicklungen, die auf dem Wege dahin durchaus bestanden haben und die Auswirkungen der bolschewistischen Machtergreifung, die bis heute reichen. Immer wieder läßt er beteiligte Akteure aus allen Gesellschaftsschichten zu Wort kommen, vom Bauern bis zum Zaren. Dadurch werden Handlungen dieser Menschen, die letztendlich zur Tragödie des Volkes führten, verständlicher. Ein faszinierendes, äußerst gut lesbares Buch - Geschichtsschreibung auf höchstem Niveau. Es sollte überall vorhanden sein, denn ohne Kenntnis von Figes Meisterwerk, ist eine der bedeutendsten Zäsuren des 20. Jahrhunderts nicht zu verstehen. (1) (Claus Baumgart)

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