Russia Under Stalin - Marblehead High School
Transcription
Russia Under Stalin - Marblehead High School
Russia Under Stalin Ch. 30 Sec. 2 Background • March 1917: Revolution that gives power to Provisional Gov’t. • October 1917: Bolshevik Revolution gives power to Communists – Leader of Bolsheviks: Lenin • Reforms under Lenin: – Seized private property, then gave it back under NEP Post-Lenin • Lenin has stroke, dies without naming successor • 2 possibilities for leader of Bolsheviks – Leon Trotsky: intellectual, military hero, close advisor of Lenin – Josef Stalin: ran day-to-day workings of Bolshevik party under Lenin Stalin’s Upward Climb • Stalin gains allies within party, teams up to exile Trotsky, then turns on allies • Stalin gathers power around himself using knowledge of the system • By 1929, in total control of the Party Totalitarian Gov’t. • Totalitarianism: complete, total control of the gov’t – Centralized around leader – Uses military force to maintain power – Good of the country over good of the individual – Security over liberty Stalin’s Economic Control • Industry: – 5 Year Plan: rapid industrialization to catch up to European countries – Increased production of steel, coal and oil at the expense of consumer goods (clothing and food) • Agriculture: – Collective farms: seized private farms and made them public … products are property of gov’t – Peasant protests: • Peasants forced to work at gunpoint or killed • Kulaks: wealthy farmers that revolted against collectivization Life Under Totalitarianism • Police Terror: – Monitored “suspicious” behavior – Seized suspects without warrants • Great Purge: – Targets: “Old” Bolsheviks, army officers, any potential or imagined threat • • “The duty of an investigator was to scratch away at innocence until guilt was uncovered. If no guilt was uncovered then they haven't scratched deep enough.” – Child 44 "People simply disappeared, always during the night. Your name was removed from the registers, every record of everything you had ever done was wiped out, your one-time existence was denied and then forgotten. You were abolished, annihilated: vaporized was the usual word.“—1984 • Gulags: Siberian prison camps – 18 million people killed under Stalin’s rule Indoctrination and Propaganda • Indoctrination: instruction in the gov’t’s beliefs – Started with children in schools – Used writing, art, music, propaganda • Soviet Realism: art style depicting working men and women and praising Soviet Russia Cult of Personality • Cult of Personality – Kim Jong Il, Hitler, Stalin, Mao Zedong – Attributing all success to one influential ruler – “I thank Comrade Stalin for this good life” Censorship and Persecution • Writers, composers, artists forced to alter or hide events and opinions • “Show trials”: suspects would be tortured into confession, then given a fake public trial – Officials in the gov’t that were convicted were then erased from the record • Religion outlawed: worshippers persecuted and imprisoned Estimates of the Damage • Killed by Stalin: 20 – 50 million – Killed by Hitler: 10 – 25 million • Famine, 1922: 5 million deaths • Famine, 1932: 7 million deaths • Famine, 1947: 2 million deaths