The best sons of the fatherland : workers in the vanguard of Soviet collectivization / Lynne Viola.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | MEF Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi | Genel Koleksiyon | HD 1492 .S65 V56 1987 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 0004653 |
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HD 1375 .S54 2016 Başarının perde arkası / | HD 1382.5 .S738 1999 Statistical digest : a resource for the reit industry. | HD 1478 .U6 S5 1989 All God's dangers : the life of Nate Shaw / | HD 1492 .S65 V56 1987 The best sons of the fatherland : workers in the vanguard of Soviet collectivization / | HD 1536 .S65 D3613 1988 Rural Russia under the new regime / | HD 1691 .B37 2014 Blue future : protecting water for people and the planet forever / | HD 1691 .D45 2009 Managing and transforming water conflicts / |
Includes index.
Bibliography: pages 263-280.
In this ground-breaking study Lynne Viola--the first Western scholar to gain access to the Soviet state archives on collectivization--brilliantly examines a lost chapter in the history of the Stalin revolution. Looking in detail at the backgrounds, motivations, and mentalities of the 25,000ers, Viola embarks on the first Western investigation of the everyday activities of Stalin's rank-and-file shock troops, the "leading cadres" of socialist construction. In the process, Viola sheds new light on how the state mobilized working-class support for collectivization and reveals that, contrary to popular belief, the 25,000ers went into the countryside as willing recruits. This unique social history uses an "on the scene" line of vision to offer a new understanding of the workings, times, and cadres of Stalin's revolution.