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Academic
journals
“Even though
Pirani has clear political preferences, they never compromise the
soundness of his analysis. Replete with new and often compelling source
material, this impressively researched book is a stimulating, nuanced,
competent and very readable account of critical political struggles
during this important period in Soviet history. Most significantly, it
actually has the potential to enhance our understanding of their
outcomes. It undoubtedly deserves a wide readership.” - Simon Ertz, Stanford University, in Europe-Asia
Studies, May 2009.
“The study is
particularly strong in its exploration of industrial worker politics in
these formative years and the degree to which they were oppositional in
purpose, values and organisation. [...] Although studies of labour and
politics, like Pirani's revolution, are also 'in retreat', this
stimulating volume deserves a wide readership.” - William Rosenberg, University of
Michigan, in Revolutionary Russia, October 2009.
“The greatest
contribution of this sophisticated and penetrating analysis of
worker-party relations is, in my view, the extraordinarily detailed way
that Pirani has reconstructed debates and events at the grass-roots
level. He effectively puts the reader 'in the room' with rank-and-file
communists, and - to an unprecedented extent - independent non-party
worker and socialist activists, as they doggedly defended the
revolution's democratic premise on the shopfloor and in the factory
cell. Through skilful writing and his intimate knowledge of his
sources, we get a good sense of the emotional energy and urgency with
which some workers engaged in the political arena at this critical
juncture.” - Page
Herrlinger in the International Review of Social History, April 2009.
“Simon Pirani
approaches his topic from a basically Marxist perspective and utilizes
as criteria the concepts of participatory democracy and the historical
role (in the Marxist sense) that workers seemed to have achieved during
the 1917 revolutions. Those who fear that this approach will be too
delimiting and open to bias can be reassured. Pirani skilfully
navigates the straits of conflicting political convictions as he wields
his above-mentioned dual criteria to reveal quite mercilessly how
Communist Party leaders and elites imposed hierarchical, bureaucratic,
and repressive structures on the workers and the soviets. Even those
who do not share the author's enthusiasm for what October 1917 seemed
to portend will hardly be disappointed in this incisively sketched
portrait of the utter betrayal of 1917's promise.” - Michael Melancon, Auburn University, in
the American Historical Review,
February 2009.
“This study
brings significant new insights to the subject and makes a very
significant contribution to filling in the 'view from below' of the
early stages of the regime's evolution towards a totalitarian
dictatorship and of the coalescence of a bureaucratic elite. In
particular, it provides a rare, concrete feel for the still vibrant,
though increasingly stifled, political life among the various party and
non-party oppositions, all of whom defended, albeit within varying
limits, the democratic and egalitarian aspirations of the October
Revolution.” - David
Mandel in Critique, May 2009.
“Pirani's
work, which draws extensively on documents from numerous central
Russian and local Moscow party archives and demonstrates an outstanding
command of the secondary literature, adds considerable nuance and
detail to the workers' movement and its relationship to the state.
[...] It is also a reminder that research on the Russian revolution,
even as we approach its centennial, has not been exhausted. [...]
recommended reading for all Soviet scholars.” - Nicholas Ganson in The Soviet and
Post-Soviet Review 38 (2011)
“This is an
enormously well-researched book. Pirani has made extensive use of four
local Moscow archives in addition to the central state and party
archives. His careful sifting of the literature [...] shows clearly in
his copious footnotes [...] It is to the credit of the publishers that
they have decided to produce a paperback edition, as the hardback price
would have kept a book that deserves wide readership from reaching its
audience.” - T. Clayton Black,
Washington College, in NEP Era Journal, 2009.
“The end of
the cold war and the opening up of previously closed Soviet archives
has made possible a reassessment ... Utilising a huge array of sources,
Pirani seeks to demonstrate that workers, at least in Moscow, were not
simply engaged in a struggle for survival but were capable of
expressing alternatives policies to the Bolsheviks, with whom they were
increasingly disillusioned.” - Rick
Simon, Nottingham Trent University, in Capital and Class, September 2009.
"Pirani adds
significantly to our understanding of high Party politics, including
Lenin’s conflicts with inner-Party oppositionists, the 1920 trade
union debate, the Tenth Party Congress’ ban on factions, and the
1923 contest between Stalin’s triumvirate and the oppositionists
associated with Trotsky. The heart of the book, though, are his
case studies of trade union, soviet and Party organizations in Moscow,
and particularly his examinations of nonparty factory workers’
protests and strikes. [...] Among the studies to which his volume
invites immediate comparison are Jonathan Aves's Workers against Lenin
and Robert V. Daniels's The Conscience of the Revolution.” - Michael Hickey, Bloomsburg University,
h-Russia, April 2009. Read the full
review here
The
radical and left press
“Pirani has
assembled a picture not of just what Trotsky said here or Lenin there,
if you like the grand theory, but rather what lesser figures, people
with more concern, perhaps, for what they'd understood the revolution
to have been and how it should be defended. What we get here, then,
includes the unnamed hecklers, the calls from the back, reported
dutifully by those Cheka agents. The evidence he assembles is confined
by choice specifically to the period 1920-1924. It is an interesting
choice, for in this period we are leaving behind the distortions
imposed by civil war.” -
William Dixon in Mute. Read
the full review here
“According to
[…] Simon Pirani, although certain aspects of Bolshevik ideology
‘played a crucial part in weakening and undermining the
revolution, that ideology itself was powerfully impacted by social
changes over which it [the Bolshevik government] had little control,
and to whose operation it often blinded itself.’ […] The
richness of detail and originality of Pirani’s research is
remarkable.” – Samuel
Farber (author of Before Stalinism), in Against the Current. Read the full review here
“Pirani sets
out to show how little power ordinary workers had in the period
1920-24, over their workplace and over the Soviet Union in general.
[…] He is the only person on the libertarian left who has set
out to prove the point using original materials. Pirani is concerned to
show that there were real workers and so a real working class in this
period, and not a shadow class’’.” – Hillel Ticktin (author of The Ideas of
Leon Trotsky, Origins of the Crisis in the USSR etc), in the Weekly
Worker. Read the full
review here and a response by Geoff Barr here
“It is
difficult to convey in a short review how valuable is the new material
that Pirani presents in this compelling study […] including
contemporary reports, speeches, articles and interventions by dozens of
Bolshevik and non-Bolshevik workplace activists, factory managers,
dissidents and bureaucrats – culled from minutes of various
soviet, trade union and party meetings, from newspapers of the time, as
well as from detailed reports of the Cheka, not to mention a
considerable body of Russian-language post-Soviet scholarship. – Paul Le Blanc (author of A Short
History of the US Working Class, etc) in New Politics. Read
the review here, reproduced on the Radical Socialist web site,
based in India
“One thing is
beyond dispute: the Russian revolution was not the first link in a
world proletarian uprising, though many genuinely believed it was at
the time. It’s not helpful to reach back into history and start
pointing fingers, but then this is not what Pirani does. As a Marxist,
he tries to analyse the contending social forces, and explain why
events happened the way they did.” – Adam Ford in The Commune. Read
the review here.
Pirani asks the question “could things have been
different?” and wisely concludes that the material conditions
(including the defeat of the workers’ revolutions outside Russia)
meant that the outcome would have been little different in terms of the
demise of the revolution. However, he does suggest that a different
choice by the communists in 1921 as regards working class democracy
would have at least have left a better legacy than the monolith of the
“workers’ state” which remains today “a
burdensome shibboleth for the workers’ movement”. - The Internationalist Communist Tendency
web site. Read
the review here.
“Pirani’s
book should be read by those who think, or who want to refute, that the
state in Russia under the Bolsheviks could ever have been described as
‘workers’’." - Adam
Buick in Socialist Standard. Read the review here
In
the frontispiece
“This powerful
book takes a close look at the relationship between the Bolshevik party
and the democratic aspirations of rank-and-file workers in Moscow in
the crucial early years of the Russian revolution. Simon Pirani's
prodigious utilization of local party and secret police archives allows
him to show how the Bolshevik party leadership systematically destroyed
democratic voices on the shop floor: the party offered a ‘social
contract’ that promised improving standards of living in exchange
for the loss of a political voice. Paying close attention to the
material reality of the post-revolutionary period and to moments of
intense shop floor dissent, this book goes beyond Robert
Daniels’s classic The Conscience of the Revolution in emphasizing
the importance of independent and non-party socialist worker activists.
He instructs careful readers about the complex, fragile thing called
democracy, exploring its origin and demise in economically and
politically fraught conditions of revolutionary change.” - Diane P. Koenker, University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA (author of Moscow Workers and
the 1917 Revolution, etc.)
“Why did the
Russian revolution, a mass uprising for justice and democracy, end in a
single party dictatorship? This gripping tale of workers in revolution
and retreat is essential reading for anyone interested in an
answer. Pirani follows Russian workers as they seize power, fight
for a democratic revolution, and lose to a Bolshevik party bureaucracy
intent on consolidating control. Using exciting new sources, Pirani
takes us into the factories of Moscow to understand relations among
activists, workers, bureaucrats, and a multiplicity of revolutionary
parties.” - Wendy
Goldman, Carnegie Mellon University, USA (author of Women, The
State and Revolution, Women
at the Gates, Terror and
Democracy in the Age of Stalin, etc.)
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