Three "Whys" of the Russian Revolution, by Richard Pipes, 1995. |
Historian Richard Pipes. |
I first read Richard Pipes’ book Three “Whys” of the Russian Revolution in high school, back in the
late 1990’s, after I took an excellent class called “Russia in the 20th
century,” which piqued my interest in Russian history. I re-read Pipes’ book
this winter, and I was impressed by his analysis of the Russian Revolution.
Three “Whys” of the
Russian Revolution is a short book, just 84 pages long, and it’s a
distillation of some of the ideas that Pipes presented in his 1991 book The Russian Revolution. The three
questions that Pipes seeks to answer in the book are:
- Why did tsarism fall?
- Why did the Bolsheviks succeed?
- Why did Stalin succeed Lenin?
Pipes also makes a compelling case for the Bolsheviks’
triumph as being one of a cunning coup d’état mixed with good luck, rather than
a genuine popular uprising. Pipes writes: “The Bolsheviks seized power in
Russia because it had become available for a power seizure. Were the choice up
to them, they would much rather have taken over Germany or England.” (p.65) Certainly
Karl Marx would have been shocked to learn that the first Communist government
in the world was instituted in Russia.
Pipes is very anti-Communist, and is one of the more
conservative historians of the Russian Revolution. In his answer to why Stalin
succeeded Lenin, he writes: “I have yet to see a satisfactory Marxist
explanation why history, after the death of Lenin, took a thirty-year detour by
vesting what Lenin himself had called ‘unbounded power’ in a despot whom the
revisionists regard as a traitor to the cause of Leninism.” (p.64) Pipes writes
that Stalin was the most competent Communist politician, and thus a somewhat
logical choice to succeed Lenin. Pipes also writes that “Lenin does not seem to
have penetrated Stalin’s personality and noticed the mass killer lurking in his
black soul.” (p.83)
Three Whys of the Russian
Revolution is a good, short introduction to some of the most interesting
questions surrounding the Russian Revolution. I’d recommend it to anyone
interested in Russian history.
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