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Constructing the Soviet Elite
Constructing the Soviet Elite
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Constructing the Soviet Elite

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The Soviet Communist Party faced a large-scale problem of regulating membership after the Russian Revolution of 1917. While recruitments were conducted mainly according to the internal Party rules, exclusion campaigns were periodically adopted to ensure ideological purity. In the decades before World War II, these reviews took various forms from mere administrative re-registration to violent purges that involved hundred of thousands of arrests among Party members. The so-called Great Purge of 1937-1939 implicitly recognized the failure of the partys original policy of recruitment and promotion, and of the inability of the Partys political leadership to influence membership.Although the Great Purge proved tragic, its implementation revealed great preparation and almost daily membership management. As surprising as it may seem, the statistics on membership movements (accessions, expulsions, etc.) were never as well kept as they were from 1937 to 1939. After the Great Purge, a new and more intellectual membership rose to power. This generation presided over the destiny of the Soviet Union until Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985. The innovative character of Gal-Georges Moullecs study lies in the use of unpublished archival sources.
Undertittel
Recruitments, Exclusions, and Repressions Within the Soviet Communist Party, 1917-1941
ISBN
9781680536959
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
25.10.2025
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