Home
Register / Sign In | Search | About Us | Policies | Contact Us | Periodical Catalogs | Library Registration Rus
Types of products
BOOKS
PERIODICALS
MAPS
VIDEO / CD
AUDIO BOOKS


Discounts are available
FAQ
Periodical Catalogs
Shipping Charges
Subject Catalogs

All the books listed on this web site are in stock and will be shipped within 3 business days.


We Accept: Paypal, Mastercard, Visa, American Express, and Discover 

Since 1989 Panorama of Russia has specialized in academic and reference publications from the Russian Federation and the Commonwealth of Independent States.


« Back Print this page
PRICE
$ 22.10
019975
Sirotkin, V.G
Pochemu Proigral Trotskii?
[ Why did Trotskii lose?]

Moscow:  Eksmo, Algoritm, 2005
476 p
Hardcover. 12.5 x 20 cm
ISBN: 5699103570
Language: Russian
This book is about the struggle for power inside the Bolshevik party in 1922-1927. According to Sirotkin, the primary reasons of the failed Bolsheviks` experiment is not that they did not follow the doctrine of Marx, Lenin, Trotskii, or Stalin, but in different "starting material" from the West, beginning with natural conditions and finishing with the social structure of imperial Russia. Trotskii, up to his loss in 1927, kept the hope that the world revolution would give a helping hand to peasant Russia. Unlike him Stalin was not a hostage of this or any theory, and was seeking only for the dictatorial power. When he got it, he found the answers to the typically Russian questions: "What is to be done?" and "Who is quilty?". The author lays out the essence of Stalin’s national-bolshevism and the society he started to build.
Subjects
» Who is Who / Personalities/Biographies   » Communist Leaders
» History: General Works and Philosophy of History   » Russia in the 20th-21st Centuries
Quick Search
books on sale
rare books


Search

Please note that searching in the Cyrillic version of the site is case sensitive.

This web site works best using Internet Explorer.
About Us | | Policies | | Contact Us | | Library Registration |
© Panorama of Russia, 2004 - 2024