If I was asked to recommend one book for
the interested intellectual, the advanced interested undergraduate, and the interested
graduate student on Russian and Soviet history it would be Ronald Suny’s Red
Flag Unfurled: History, Historians, and the Russian Revolution (London: Verso,
2017). Suny’s book does what far too few books do. On one level it explores the discourse, particularly the Western discourse and more specifically the American discourse, on
Russian and Soviet history and puts it into its proper broader economic, political, and cultural contexts. On another level, it offers a theoretical approach to
Russian and Soviet history and history in general that is analytic systematic, and critical rather than polemical and apologetic, as are so much post-1917 writing on Russian and Soviet history, as Suny notes. On still another level it
explores the history of Russia from the late Tsarist era to
the Stalin era. Highly recommended.
Where I, Ron, blog on a variety of different subjects--social theoretical, historical, cultural, political, social ethical, the media, and so on (I got the Max Weber, the Mark Twain, and the Stephen Leacock in me)--in a sometimes Niebuhrian or ironic way all with an attitude. Enjoy. Disagree. Be very afraid particularly if you have a socially and culturally constructed irrational fear of anything over 140 characters.
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