MIA: History: Soviet History: 100th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution

 

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The JACOBIN Russian Revolution 1917 Commemoration Project
This is a short introduction to the Project and the associated translation project.
by Einde O’Callaghan

Before February
The February Revolution erupted 100 years ago and swept away a blood-soaked monarchy.
by Todd Chretien

The Story of the February Revolution
Russian workers went on strike on International Women’s Day 1917. They ended up toppling tsarism.
by Kevin Murphy

From the Finland Station
Lenin arrived at Finland Station 100 years ago today, reshaping Bolshevik strategy and the course of the Russian Revolution.
by Yurii Colombo

Gramsci and the Russian Revolution
What did a young Antonio Gramsci think about the Russian Revolution?
by Alvaro Bianchi & Daniela Mussi

From February to October
In the standard account, February was the good revolution and October was the extremist one. But events in Russia were far more complex than that.
by Lars T. Lih

Finland’s Revolution
The forgotten Finnish Revolution has perhaps more lessons for us today than events in 1917 Russia.
by Eric Blanc

The Women of 1917
Women weren’t just the Russian Revolution’s spark, but the motor that drove it forward.
by Megan Trudell

The Bolsheviks and Antisemitism
Antisemitism was found across the political divide in Russia’s year of revolution.
by Brendan McGeever

Violence and Revolution in 1917
The revolutionary violence of 1917 paled in comparison to that on the fronts of the Great War.
by Mike Haynes

The July Days
The Bolsheviks wanted to avoid the Paris Commune’s fate. That’s why they didn’t take power in July 1917.
by Daniel Gaido

The 1917 Peasant Revolutions
In Russia 1917, ordinary rural people took direct action to remake their world.
by Sarah Badcock

After the February Consensus
The October Revolution was propelled by mass dissatisfaction with the erosion of February’s gains.
by Chris Read

The Kornilov Coup
One hundred years ago, why did the alliance between General Lavr Kornilov and Alexander Kerensky fall apart?
by Paul Le Blanc

The Baku Commune
The story of the Baku Commune’s leaders, who pursued power democratically and nonviolently, belies many of the myths of the Russian Revolution
by Ronald Suny

From Compromise to Power
Over the course of 1917, the Petrograd Soviet transformed from a body willing to negotiate with capital to one ready for revolution.
by Kevin Murphy

How the Bolsheviks Won
The Bolsheviks’ rise to power, one hundred years ago today, revisited.
by Alexander Rabinowitch

The Day That Shook the World
The story of November 7, 1917 — the day the Bolsheviks changed world history.
by China Miéville

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Last updated on 20 May 2019