For the edited collection Historically Inevitable: Turning Points in the Russian Revolution, editor Tony Brenton brings together fourteen leading scholars to consider the inevitability of the Russian Revolution by focusing on key turning points. While readers may not necessarily share the authors’ commitment to the utility of counterfactual history, the volume contributes to our understanding of the various agents and actors involved in the Revolution through its detailed perspectives and wealth of information, finds Roberto A Castelar
In Russian Grand Strategy in the Era of Global Power Competition, editor Andrew Monaghan brings toge...
The author analyzes modern Russian history from a new perspective. Due to the ideological heritage o...
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Book review "Chatterjee, Choi, Kirschenbaum, Lisa A. & Field, Deborah A., Russia’s Long Twentieth Ce...
Book review of Russia’s retreat from Poland, 1920: From permanent-revolution to peaceful coexistence
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146979/1/hisn13056_am.pdfhttps://deepb...
From December 1994 to August 1996, Russia was engaged in the Chechen War, a Vietnam-style quagmire t...
Sergeev, Evgeny. The Bolsheviks and Britain during the Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917–24. Bl...
The Russian Revolution was an explosion of mass democracy from below. It transformed the people who ...
The idea that the autocracy might have successfully modernized itself has, in recent years, spread w...
Laura Engelstein, Russia in Flames: War, Revolution, Civil War, 1914–21. 823 pp. New York: Oxford Un...
For the first time in the historiography, the problem of armed confrontation between the Red Army an...
In Russia: What Everyone Needs to Know, Timothy J. Colton offers a concise yet comprehensive introdu...
In From Washington to Moscow: US-Soviet Relations and the Collapse of the USSR, Louis Sell traces th...
Catalogue for the 'Revolutionary Books' exhibition, displayed at Newcastle's Literary and Philosophi...
In Russian Grand Strategy in the Era of Global Power Competition, editor Andrew Monaghan brings toge...
The author analyzes modern Russian history from a new perspective. Due to the ideological heritage o...
In Black Wind, White Snow: The Rise of Russia’s New Nationalism, Charles Clover traces an intellectu...
Book review "Chatterjee, Choi, Kirschenbaum, Lisa A. & Field, Deborah A., Russia’s Long Twentieth Ce...
Book review of Russia’s retreat from Poland, 1920: From permanent-revolution to peaceful coexistence
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146979/1/hisn13056_am.pdfhttps://deepb...
From December 1994 to August 1996, Russia was engaged in the Chechen War, a Vietnam-style quagmire t...
Sergeev, Evgeny. The Bolsheviks and Britain during the Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917–24. Bl...
The Russian Revolution was an explosion of mass democracy from below. It transformed the people who ...
The idea that the autocracy might have successfully modernized itself has, in recent years, spread w...
Laura Engelstein, Russia in Flames: War, Revolution, Civil War, 1914–21. 823 pp. New York: Oxford Un...
For the first time in the historiography, the problem of armed confrontation between the Red Army an...
In Russia: What Everyone Needs to Know, Timothy J. Colton offers a concise yet comprehensive introdu...
In From Washington to Moscow: US-Soviet Relations and the Collapse of the USSR, Louis Sell traces th...
Catalogue for the 'Revolutionary Books' exhibition, displayed at Newcastle's Literary and Philosophi...
In Russian Grand Strategy in the Era of Global Power Competition, editor Andrew Monaghan brings toge...
The author analyzes modern Russian history from a new perspective. Due to the ideological heritage o...
In Black Wind, White Snow: The Rise of Russia’s New Nationalism, Charles Clover traces an intellectu...