tsarist Russia. In terms of leadership, the Soviet Union returned to a nearly autocratic rule as Stalin used his political positions and cult of personality to accumulate a considerable amount of power over the government. Similarly, both Stalin and the tsar employed violence as a tool to…
Stalin planned a five-year economic plan called collectivization and believed that under that plan, the USSR would industrialize, and become stronger than any nation in the West. Unfortunately, the USSR was made up mostly of poor peasants. Mostly, these peasants harvested crops using their hands and wooden plows. Therefore, to make the plan successful, he had to brings some changes in peasant way of harvesting crops and their lives. Stalin required two things from peasants: firstly, the peasants…
rise of the Stalinist State and the rise of the communist bureaucracy in the Soviet Union. Weber’s definition of “rational-legal authority” in the traditional bourgeoisie capitalist state defines the social traditions of government that Lenin and Stalin sought to eradicate in the formation of a communist bureaucracy. For Weber, the Soviet Union was formed on the principles of the legal state authority of the proletariat (the workers) that rose up against the traditional czarist bourgeoisie to…
Napoleon, who parallels the Russian revolution's leader, the brutal man, Stalin. Both of these rulers had visions of grandeur which involved them gaining total control and power through any means necessary. Napoleon and Stalin share negative personality traits; those traits led them to make similar decisions…
corrupt, the leaders were not faithful to the original doctrine of communism. They created their own version of a communism, one that would benefit themselves, as well as (they thought) Russia. Among one of those leaders was Joseph Stalin, a dictator who brought many years of isolation, repression, paranoia and gulags to the Russian people. Stalinism greatly differed from Marxism by ignoring the class struggle, and being a communist dictatorship.…
Joseph Stalin was one of the most influential figures of the 20th century, especially to the Soviet Union. By the time Vladimir Lenin passed away Stalin had almost complete control of the government. With his power over everyone, Stalin forced his biggest rivals out of the contention for leader. In doing this he had freedom to do as he pleased. Joseph Stalin was aware the Soviet Union was far from being where he wanted it to be, so he created the Five-Year Plans. Although, Stalin’s achievements…
Josef Stalin and Adolf Hitler are two different rulers, but to the public eye they are viewed as similar people. The both of them were very strong in their rule. They had no sympathy and they were both dictators. They ruled by terror. Stalin was born into a poor family. His father was a shoemaker and his mother a laundress. He had a rough childhood. First off, his family was poor so there was always a struggle for money and his father was a terrible alcoholic. He continuously beat his son in…
Joseph Stalin once said “The death of one man is a tragedy. The death of millions is a statistic.” This quote kind of symbolized what Stalin did when he would keep throwing his own people at the German snot carrying about how many millions of his people would die. Joseph Stalin help his country win World War II, but at a cost of millions of his people dead and his people’s rights were ignored. Joseph Stalin, originally named Joseph Djuskashvili, was born in 1879 in Georgia, Russia (Mathews, 37).…
Pact got the nickname the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Some would also call the Nonaggression Pact the Hitler-Stalin Pact or the Nazi German-Soviet Union Pact. After the signing of the pact Stalin made a toast and said, “I know how much the German nation loves its Führer, I should therefore like to drink to his health.” Joseph Stalin toasted to Hitler for the start of their friendship. However, Stalin did not know that Hitler may betray their…
During his time as leader, Stalin implemented many significant changes within the Soviet Union, such as his program of rapid industrialization and modernization, which achieved huge increases in Soviet productivity and economic growth, but cost the suffering of many Russians; and Stalin’s forced alteration in the collectivsation of farms, which cost the deaths of millions. Even more so, the population of the Soviet Union suffered greatly during the 1930s, in which Stalin purged the…