Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I Racism, Total War, Imperial Collapse and Revolution
- 1 Prelude to Genocide
- 2 War and Genocide in the Twentieth Century
- 3 The Armenian Genocide
- 4 Australia’s Stolen Generations, 1914–2021
- 5 Eurocentrism, Silence and Memory of Genocide in Colonial Libya, 1929–1934
- 6 Spain 1936–1945
- 7 Genocide in Stalinist Russia and Ukraine, 1930–1938
- 8 The Famine in Soviet Kazakhstan
- Part II World War Two
- Part III The Nation-State System during the Cold War
- Part IV Globalisation and Genocide since the Cold War
- Index
7 - Genocide in Stalinist Russia and Ukraine, 1930–1938
from Part I - Racism, Total War, Imperial Collapse and Revolution
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2023
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I Racism, Total War, Imperial Collapse and Revolution
- 1 Prelude to Genocide
- 2 War and Genocide in the Twentieth Century
- 3 The Armenian Genocide
- 4 Australia’s Stolen Generations, 1914–2021
- 5 Eurocentrism, Silence and Memory of Genocide in Colonial Libya, 1929–1934
- 6 Spain 1936–1945
- 7 Genocide in Stalinist Russia and Ukraine, 1930–1938
- 8 The Famine in Soviet Kazakhstan
- Part II World War Two
- Part III The Nation-State System during the Cold War
- Part IV Globalisation and Genocide since the Cold War
- Index
Summary
The mass killing that took place in the Soviet Union in the 1930s was part and parcel of the interlocking Bolshevik projects of state building and the refashioning of society. The process of radically transforming the social, economic and political life of Russia had already begun already under Vladimir Ilich Lenin during the Great October Revolution, starting in 1917, and cost millions of lives, most during the protracted civil war and international interventions of 1918–21. But the genocide of Soviet citizens in the 1930s was directly related to Josef Stalin’s ascendance to power during what has been called the ‘Stalin Revolution’, or the ‘Second Revolution’, which centred on crash programmes of forced industrialisation and agricultural collectivisation inaugurated in 1928. Simultaneously, Stalin consolidated his dictatorial power. By 1930, writes Oleg Khlevniuk, ‘the Stalinization of the Politburo was completed’ and Stalin was ‘confirmed as the sole leader of the Politburo’.
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- The Cambridge World History of Genocide , pp. 162 - 185Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023