Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-fv566 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-21T01:53:13.973Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Further reading

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2017

Rex A. Wade
Affiliation:
George Mason University, Virginia
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Further reading

The following gives an extensive list of further reading. Only English-language works are included, as explained in the preface. Special attention should be drawn to several books that contain large number of articles on 1917 which are not listed separately but which contribute important essays on the revolution. Especially valuable are the collection edited by Robert Service and that edited by Frankel, Frankel, and Knei-Paz. Special note should also be taken of the many short essays in Critical Companion to the Russian Revolution as well as two earlier encyclopedias of the revolution edited by Harold Shukman and by George Jackson and Robert Devlin. Somewhat older but with still valuable essays are the collections edited by Elwood and Pipes. Most recent are the volumes being published in the Russia's Great War and Revolution project, three initial sets of which have been published and are listed below under volume titles (Russia's Home Front in War and Revolution, Russian Culture in War and Revolution, The Empire and Nationalism at War), with more forthcoming. All these works contain a wealth of material which should not be overlooked by the interested reader just because the many essays cannot be listed separately. Some of them are cited in the endnotes. Extensive bibliographies on the revolutionary era are those of Murray Frame and Jonathan Smele.

Abraham, Richard. Alexander Kerensky: The First Love of the Revolution. New York, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abraham, Richard. “Mariia L. Bochkareva and the Russian Amazons of 1917.” In Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. Edmondson, Linda, 124–44. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Abramson, Henry. A Prayer for the Government: Ukrainians and Jews in Revolutionary Times, 1917–1920. Cambridge, MA, 1999.Google Scholar
Abrosimov, T. A.The Composition of the Petersburg Committee of the RSDRP(b) in 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 11, no. 1 (1998): 3744.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Acton, Edward. Rethinking the Russian Revolution. London, 1990.Google Scholar
Alapuro, R. State and Revolution in Finland. Berkeley, CA, 1988.Google Scholar
Allworth, E.The Search for Group Identity in Turkistan, March 1917–September 1922.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 17, no. 4 (1983): 487502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anweiler, Oskar K. The Soviets: The Russian Workers, Peasants and Soldiers Councils, 1905–1921. Trans. Hein, R.. New York, 1974.Google Scholar
Arens, Olavi.The Estonian Maapaev during 1917.” In The Baltic States in Peace and War, 1917–1945, ed. Vardys, V. Stanley and Misiunas, Romuald J., 1930. University Park, PA, 1978.Google Scholar
Arens, Olavi. “Soviets in Estonia 1917–1918.” In Ezergailis, and von Pistohlkors, , Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 294319.Google Scholar
Ascher, Abraham. “The Kornilov Affair.” Russian Review 12, no. 4 (1953): 235–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ascher, Abraham, ed. The Mensheviks in the Russian Revolution. London, 1976.Google Scholar
Asher, Harvey. “The Kornilov Affair: A History and Interpretation.” Russian Review 29, no. 3 (1970): 286300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, Tony. “Soldiers Not Peasants: The Moral Basis of the February Revolution of 1917.” Sociology 26 (August 1992): 455–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aun, Karl. “The 1917 Revolutions and the Idea of the State in Estonia.” In Ezergailis, and von Pistohlkors, , Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 286–93.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution.” Russian Review 26, no. 4 (1967): 341–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “The Bolshevik Revolution and Workers’ Control in Russian Industry.” Slavic Review 22 (1963): 4763.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avrich, Paul. The Russian Anarchists. Princeton, 1967.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “Russian Factory Committees in 1917.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 11 (1963): 161–82.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul., ed. The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution. London, 1973.Google Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “‘We're for the Muzhiks’ Party!’ Peasant Support for the Socialist Revolutionary Party During 1917.” Europe-Asia Studies 53, no. 1 (2001): 133–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “Personal and Political Networks in 1917: Vladimir Zenzinov and the Socialist Revolutionary Party.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 131–57.Google Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. Politics and the People in Revolutionary Russia: A Provincial History. Cambridge, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “Women, Protest, and Revolution: Soldiers’ Wives in Russia during 1917.” International Review of Social History 49, no. 1 (2004): 4770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, Mark. Peasants, Power, and Place: Revolution in the Villages of Kharkiv Province, 1914–1921. Cambridge, MA, 2016.Google Scholar
Baker, Mark. “Rampaging Soldaki, Cowering Police, Riots and Moral Economy: The Social Impact of the Great War in Kharkiv Province.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 3(2001):137155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basil, John D. The Mensheviks in the Revolution of 1917. Columbus, OH, 1983.Google Scholar
The Bolsheviks and the October Revolution: Minutes of the Central Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks), August 1917–February 1918. Trans. Bone, Anne. London, 1974.Google Scholar
Borys, Jurij. “Political Parties in the Ukraine.” In Hunczak, , Ukraine, 128–58.Google Scholar
Boyd, J. R.The Origins of Order No. 1.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 3 (1968): 359–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinton, Maurice. The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control, 1917–1921: The State and Counterrevolution. Montreal, 1975.Google Scholar
Brovkin, Vladimir N. The Mensheviks after October: Socialist Opposition and the Rise of the Bolshevik Dictatorship. Ithaca, 1987.Google Scholar
Browder, Robert Paul and Kerensky, Alexander F., eds. The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents. 3 vols. Stanford, CA, 1961.Google Scholar
Bryant, Louise. Six Red Months in Russia. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Buchanan, George. My Mission to Russia and Other Diplomatic Memories. 2 vols. London, 1923.Google Scholar
Budnitskii, Oleg. Russian Jews between the Reds and the Whites, 1917–1920. Philadelphia, 2012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buldakov, V. P.Scholarly Passions around the Myth of ‘Great October’: Results of the Past Decade.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2, no. 2 (2001): 295305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buldakov, V. P.. “Soldiers and Changes in the Psychology of the Peasantry and the Legal and Political Consciousness in Russia, 1914–1923.” The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 27, nos. 2–3 (2000): 217–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunyan, James and Fisher, H. H., eds. The Bolshevik Revolution 1917–1918: Documents and Materials. Stanford, CA, 1934; reprinted 1961, 1965.Google Scholar
Burdzhalov, E. N.Revolution in Moscow.” Soviet Studies in History 26 (1987–88): 10100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burdzhalov, E. N.. Russia's Second Revolution: The February 1917 Uprising in Petrograd. Trans. and ed. Raleigh, Donald J.. Bloomington, 1987.Google Scholar
Carr, Edward Hallett. The Bolshevik Revolution, 1917–1923. 3 vols. London, 1950–53.Google Scholar
Carrère d'Encausse, Hélène. Islam and the Russian Empire: Reform and Revolution in Central Asia. Trans. Hoare, Quintin. Berkeley, 1998.Google Scholar
Chamberlin, William Henry. The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921. 2 vols. New York, 1935; reprint, Princeton, 1987.Google Scholar
Channon, John. “The Bolsheviks and the Peasantry: The Land Question during the First Eight Months of Soviet Rule.” Slavonic and East European Review 64, no. 4 (1988): 593624.Google Scholar
Chase, William and Getty, J. Arch. “The Moscow Bolshevik Cadres of 1917: A Prosopographical Analysis.” Russian History 5 (1978): 84105.Google Scholar
Chernov, Victor. The Great Russian Revolution. New Haven, 1936.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. Bolshevik Feminist: The Life of Aleksandra Kollontai. Bloomington, 1979.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. Bolshevik Women. Cambridge, 1997.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. “Working-Class and Peasant Women in the Russian Revolution, 1917–1923.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 8, no. 2 (1982): 215–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clowes, Edith W., Kassow, Samuel D. and West, James L., eds. Between Tsar and People: Educated Society and the Quest for Public Identity in Late Imperial Russia. Princeton, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, Aaron J. Imagining the Unimaginable: World War, Modern Art, and the Politics of Public Culture in Russia, 1914–1917. Lincoln, NE and London, 2008.Google Scholar
Cohen, Stephen F. Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A Political Biography, 1888–1938. New York, 1973.Google Scholar
Collins, D. N.Kabinet, Forest and Revolution in the Siberian Altai to May 1918.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 1 (1991): 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, D. N.. “A Note on the Numerical Strength of the Russian Red Guard in October 1917.” Soviet Studies 24, no. 2 (October 1972): 270–80.Google Scholar
Corney, Frederick. Telling October: Memory and the Making of the Bolshevik Revolution. Ithaca and London, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corney, Frederick. Critical Companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914–1921. Ed. Acton, Edward, Cherniaev, Vladimir Iu. and Rosenberg, William G.. Bloomington, 1997.Google Scholar
Cross, Truman B.Purposes of Revolution: Chernov and 1917.” Russian Review 26, no. 4 (1967): 351–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cumming, C. K. and Pettit, Walter W., eds. Russian–American Relations, March, 1917–March, 1920: Documents and Papers. New York, 1920.Google Scholar
Daly, Jonathan. “Machine Guns, Hysteria, and the February Revolution.” Russian History 36, no. 1 (2009): 141155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daly, Jonathan and Trofimov, Leonid. Russia in War and Revolution, 1914–1922. A Documentary History. Indianapolis, 2009.Google Scholar
Daniels, Robert V. The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia. Cambridge, MA, 1960.Google Scholar
Daniels, Robert V.. Red October: The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. New York, 1967.Google Scholar
Debo, Richard K. Revolution and Survival: The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia, 1917–1918. Toronto, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denikin, Anton Ivanovich. The Russian Turmoil: Memoirs Military, Social, and Political. London, 1922.Google Scholar
Dickins, Alistair. “Rethinking the Power of Soviets: Krasnoiarsk, March–October 1917. Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 223–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dmitriev, Mikhail E.Riazan Diocese in 1917.” Russian Studies in History 38, no. 2 (Fall 1999): 6682.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donald, Moira. “Bolshevik Activity amongst the Working Women of Petrograd in 1917.” International Review of Social History 27, no. 9 (1982): 129–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donald, Moira. “‘What Did You Do in the Revolution, Mother?’: Image, Myth and Prejudice in Western Writing on the Russian Revolution.” Gender and History 7, no. 1 (April 1995): 8599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dune, E. M. Notes of a Red Guard. Trans. Koenker, Diane and Smith, S. A.. Urbana, 1993.Google Scholar
Duval, Charles. “The Bolshevik Secretariat and Yakov Sverdlov: February to October 1917.” Slavic and East European Studies 122 (1973): 4757.Google Scholar
Duval, Charles. “Yakov M. Sverdlov and the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of Soviets (VTsIK): A Study in Bolshevik Consolidation of Power.” Soviet Studies 31, no. 1 (1979): 322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edmondson, Linda Harriet. Feminism in Russia, 1900–1917. Stanford, CA, 1984.Google Scholar
Elwood, Ralph Carter, ed. Reconsiderations on the Russian Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 1976.Google Scholar
Engel, Barbara Alpern. “Not by Bread Alone: Subsistence Riots in Russia during World War I.”Journal of Modern History 69 (1997): 696721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evtuhov, Catherine. “The Church in the Russian Revolution: Arguments for and against Restoring the Patriarchate at the Church Council of 1917–1918.” Slavic Review 50 (1991): 497511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. “The Latvian ‘Autonomy’ Conference of 30 July 1917.” Journal of Baltic Studies 8, no. 2 (1977): 162–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. The Latvian Impact on the Bolshevik Revolution: The First Phase, September 1917 to April 1918. New York, 1983.Google Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. The 1917 Revolution in Latvia. New York, 1974.Google Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. “The Provisional Government and the Latvians in 1917.” Nationalities Papers 3, no. 1 (1975): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew and von Pistohlkors, Gert, eds. Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands zwischen den Revolutionen von 1905 und 1917. Cologne and Vienna, 1982.Google Scholar
Farnsworth, Beatrice. Aleksandra Kollontai: Socialism, Feminism and the Bolshevik Revolution. Stanford, CA, 1980.Google Scholar
Feldman, Robert S.The Russian General Staff and the June 1917 Offensive.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 4 (1968): 526–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferro, Marc. October 1917: A Social History of the Russian Revolution. London, 1980.Google Scholar
Ferro, Marc. The Russian Revolution of February 1917. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1972.Google Scholar
Ferro, Marc. “The Russian Soldier in 1917: Patriotic, Undisciplined and Revolutionary.” Slavic Review 30 (1971): 483512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figes, Orlando. Peasant Russia, Civil War: The Volga Countryside in Revolution, 1917–1921. Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando. A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando. “The Russian Revolution and Its Language in the Village.” Russian Review 56, no. 3 (1997): 323–45.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando and Kolonitskii, Boris. Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917. New Haven and London, 1999.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Russian Revolution. 4nd edition. Oxford, 2007.Google Scholar
Fleishauer, J.The Agrarian Program of the Russian Constitutional Democrats.” Cahiers du monde russe et soviétique 20 (1979): 179201.Google Scholar
Flenley, Paul. “Industrial Relations and the Economic Crisis of 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 2 (1991): 184209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Florinsky, Michael T. The End of the Russian Empire. New York, 1961.Google Scholar
Frame, Murray, comp. The Russian Revolution, 1905–1921: A Bibliographic Guide to Works in English. Westport, CT, 1995.Google Scholar
Frame, Murray. “Theatre and Revolution in 1917: The Case of the Petrograd State Theatres.” Revolutionary Russia 12, no. 1 (June 1999): 84102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francis, David Rowland. Russia from the American Embassy, April, 1916–November, 1918. New York, 1921.Google Scholar
Frankel, Edith Rogovin, Frankel, Jonathan and Knei-Paz, Baruch, eds. Revolution in Russia: Reassessments of 1917. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Friedgut, Theodore. Iuzovka and Revolution. 2 vols. Princeton, 1994.Google Scholar
Gaida, Fedor A.February 1917: Revolution, Power, and the Bourgeoisie.” Russian Studies in History 41, no. 4 (Spring 2003): 930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaida, Fedor A.. “The Provisional Government's Mechanism of Power (March–April, 1917).” Russian Studies in History 41, no. 4 (Spring 2003): 5272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galili, Ziva. The Menshevik Leaders in the Russian Revolution: Social Realities and Political Strategies. Princeton, 1989.Google Scholar
Galili, Ziva. “The Origins of Revolutionary Defensism: I. G. Tsereteli and the ‘Siberian Zimmerwaldists.”’ Slavic Review 41 (September 1982): 454–76.Google Scholar
Gatrell, Peter. Russia's First World War: A Social and Economic History. Harlow, 2005.Google Scholar
Gerson, Leonard. The Secret Police in Lenin's Russia. Philadelphia, 1976.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. “Iulii Martov: The Leader Who Lost His Party in 1917.” Slavonic and East European Review 72, no. 3 (1994): 424–37.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Kronstadt, 1917–1921: The Fate of a Soviet Democracy. Cambridge, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Martov: A Political Biography of a Russian Social Democrat. Cambridge, MA, 1967.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Nikolai Sukhanov: Chronicler of the Russian Revolution. London, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geyer, Dietrich. The Russian Revolution. Trans. Little, Bruce. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Gill, Graeme. Peasants and Government in the Russian Revolution. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleason, William. Alexander Guchkov and the End of the Russian Empire. Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society Transactions, no. 73, part 3, 1993.Google Scholar
Golder, Frank Alfred, ed. Documents of Russian History, 1914–1917. Gloucester, MA, 1964; reprint of 1927 edn.Google Scholar
Golikov, A. G.The Kerensky Phenomenon.” Russian Studies in History 33, no. 3 (1994–95): 4366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorky, Maxim. Untimely Thoughts: Essays on Revolution, Culture and the Bolsheviks, 1917–1918. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Got'e, I. V. Time of Troubles: The Diary of Iurii Vladimirovich Got'e, Moscow, July 8, 1917 to July 23, 1922. Trans. Emmons, T.. Princeton, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guthier, Steven L.The Popular Base of Ukrainian Nationalism in 1917.” Slavic Review 38, no. 1 (1979): 3047.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hafner, Lutz. “German Historiography on the February Revolution of 1917 since the Demise of the Soviet Union.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 3964.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haimson, Leopold H.The Mensheviks after the October Revolution.” Russian Review 38, no. 4 (1979): 456–73; 39, no. 2 (1980): 181–207; 39, no. 4 (1980): 462–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haimson, Leopold H.. “The Problem of Social Stability in Urban Russia.” Slavic Review 23, no. 4 (1964): 619–42; 24, no. 1 (1965): 1–22.Google Scholar
Harding, Neil. Leninism. Durham, NC, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, Neil. Lenin's Political Thought: Theory and Practice in the Democratic Revolution. 2 vols. New York, 1977, 1981.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “The Bolsheviks and the Formation of the Petrograd Soviet in the February Revolution.” Soviet Studies 29, no. 1 (1977): 86197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Crime, Police, and Mob Justice in Petrograd during the Russian Revolutions of 1917.” In Religious and Secular Forces in Late Tsarist Russia: Essays in Honor of Donald W. Treadgold, ed. Timberlake, Charles E., 241–71. Seattle, 1992.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Crime, Police, and Samosudy in Petrograd in the Russian Revolution and Sociological Theories of Anomie.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 275–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. The February Revolution: Petrograd 1917. Seattle, 1981.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Gosudarstvennost’, Obshchestvennost’, and Klassovost’: Crime, the Police, and the State in the Russian Revolution in Petrograd. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 2–3 (2001): 157–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedlin, Myron. “Zinoviev's Revolutionary Tactics in 1917.” Slavic Review 34, no. 1 (1975): 1943.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heenan, Louise Erwin. Russian Democracy's Fateful Blunder: The Summer Offensive of 1917. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Hemenway, Elizabeth Jones. “Nicholas in Hell: Rewriting the Tsarist Narrative in the Revolutionary Skazki of 1917.” Russian Review 60, no. 2 (2001): 185204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C., ed., Competing Voices from the Russian Revolution. Santa Barbara, CA, 2011.Google Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Discourses of Public Identity and Liberalism in the February Revolution: Smolensk, Spring 1917.” Russian Review 55, no. 4 (1996): 615–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Local Government and State Authority in the Provinces: Smolensk, February–June 1917.” Slavic Review 55, no. 4 (1996): 863–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Moderate Socialists and the Politics of Crime in Revolutionary Smolensk.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 2–3 (2001): 189218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Paper, Memory and a Good Story: How Smolensk Got Its ‘October’.” Revolutionary Russia 13, no. 2 (2000): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Peasant Autonomy, Soviet Power and Land Distribution in Smolensk Province, November 1917–May 1918.” Revolutionary Russia 7, no. 1 (1996): 14.Google Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Revolution on the Jewish Street: Smolensk, 1917.” Journal of Social History 31, no. 4 (Summer 1998): 823–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “The Provisional Government and Local Administration in Smolensk in 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 251–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “The Rise and Fall of Smolensk's Moderate Socialists: The Politics of Class and the Rhetoric of Crisis in 1917.” In Raleigh, Donald J., ed., Provincial Landscapes: Local Dimension of Soviet Power, 1917–1935, 1435. Pittsburgh, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Urban Zemliachestva and Rural Revolution: Petrograd and the Smolensk Countryside in 1917.” Soviet and Post Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 143–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Himka, John-Paul. “The National and the Social in the Ukrainian Revolution of 1917–1920: The Historiographical Agenda.” Archiv für Sozialgeschichte 34 (1994): 95110.Google Scholar
Hogan, Heather. “Conciliation Boards in Revolutionary Petrograd: Aspects of the Crisis of Labor-Management Relations in 1917.” Russian History 9 (1982): 4966.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holquist, Peter. Making War, Forging Revolution: Russia's Continuum of Crisis, 1914–1921. Cambridge, MA: 2002.Google Scholar
Holubnychy, Vsevolod.The 1917 Agrarian Revolution in the Ukraine.” In Soviet Regional Economics: Selected Works of Vsevolod Holubnychy, ed. Koropeckyi, I. S., 365. Edmonton, 1982.Google Scholar
Horsbrugh-Porter, Anna, ed., Memories of Revolution: Russian Women Remember. London and New York, 1993.Google Scholar
Hosking, Geoffrey. The Russian Constitutional Experiment: Government and Duma, 1907–1914. Cambridge, 1973.Google Scholar
Hunczak, Taras, ed. The Ukraine, 1917–1921: A Study in Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 1977.Google Scholar
Husband, W. B.Local Industry in Upheaval: The Ivanovo-Kineshma Textile Strike of 1917.” Slavic Review 47, no. 3 (1988): 448–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Immonen, Hannu. “From February Revolution to Civil War: Finnish Historians and the Year 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 89105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Imranli-Lowe, Kamala. “The Provisional Government and the Armenian Homeland Project.” Revolutionary Russia 27, no. 2 (2014): 132–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, George and Devlin, Robert, eds. Dictionary of the Russian Revolution. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Janke, Arthur E.Don Cossacks and the February Revolution.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 10, no. 2 (1968): 148–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, Arthur E.. “The Don Cossacks on the Road to Independence.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 10, no. 3 (1968): 273–94.Google Scholar
Johnston, Robert H. Tradition versus Revolution: Russia and the Balkans in 1917. Boulder, CO, 1977.Google Scholar
Jones, David R.The Officers and the October Revolution.” Soviet Studies 28, no. 2 (1976): 207–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Josephson, Paul R.Maksim Gor'kii, Science and the Russian Revolution.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 22, no. 1 (1995): 1539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, Daniel H., ed. The Workers’ Revolution in Russia, 1917: The View from Below. Cambridge, MA, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Vera. “A Dress Rehearsal for Cultural Revolution: Bolshevik Policy towards Teachers and Education between February and October, 1917. History of Education 35, no. 4–5 (2006): 427452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Vera. “Recent Israeli Historiography of the 1917 Revolution.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 6588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katkov, George. Russia 1917: The Kornilov Affair: Kerensky and the Break-Up of the Russian Army. London, 1980.Google Scholar
Kazemzadeh, Firuz. The Struggle for Transcaucasia, 1917–1921. New York, 1951.Google Scholar
Keep, John L. H. The Russian Revolution: A Study in Mass Mobilisation. London, 1976.Google Scholar
Keep, John L. H., ed. The Debate on Soviet Power: Minutes of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of Soviets, Second Convocation, October 1917–January 1918. Oxford, 1979.Google Scholar
Kennan, George Frost. Soviet-American Relations, 1917–1920. 2 vols. Princeton, 1956, 1958.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Catastrophe: Kerensky's Own Story of the Russian Revolution. New York, 1927.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Crucifixion of Liberty. New York, 1934.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Prelude to Bolshevism: The Kornilov Rebellion. New York, 1919.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. Russia and History's Turning Point. New York, 1966.Google Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. The Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform: Jadidism in Central Asia. Berkeley, 1998.Google Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. Making Uzbekistan: Nation, Empire, and Revolution in the Early USSR. Ithaca, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. “Tashkent 1917: Muslim Politics in Revolutionary Turkistan.” Slavic Review 55, no. 2 (1996): 270–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Francis. “Between Bolshevism and Menshevism: The Social-Democrat Internationalists in the Russian Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 7, no. 1 (1996): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Richard Douglas. Sergei Kirov and the Struggle for Soviet Power in the Terek Region, 1917–1918. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Kingston-Mann, Esther. Lenin and the Problem of Marxist Peasant Revolution. New York and Oxford, 1983.Google Scholar
Knei-Paz, Baruch. The Social and Political Thought of Leon Trotsky. Oxford, 1979.Google Scholar
Knox, Sir Alfred William Fortescue. With the Russian Army, 1914–1917. London, 1921.Google Scholar
Kochan, Lionel. “Kadet Policy in 1917 and the Constitutional Assembly.” Slavonic and East European Review 45 (1967): 8392.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane. Moscow Workers and the 1917 Revolution. Princeton, 1981.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane. “Urban Families, Working-Class Youth Groups, and the 1917 Revolution in Moscow.” In The Family in Imperial Russia: New Lines of Historical Research, ed. Ransel, D. L., 280304. Urbana, 1978.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane and Rosenberg, William G., Strikes and Revolution in Russia, 1917. Princeton, 1989.Google Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Antibourgeois Propaganda and Anti-'Burzhui’ Consciousness in 1917.” Russian Review 53, no. 2 (1994): 183–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Democracy in the Political Consciousness of the February Revolution.” Slavic Review 57, no. 1 (1998): 95106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “The ‘Russian Idea’ and the Ideology of the February Revolution.” In Empire and Society: New Approaches to Russian History, ed. Hara, Teruyuki and Matsuzato, Kimitaka, 4172. Sapporo, 1997.Google Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “On Studying the 1917 Revolution.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 75168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Russian Historiography of the 1917 Revolution. New Challenges to Old Paradigms?” History and Memory 21, no. 2 (Fall/Winter 2009): 3459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kowalski, Ronald I. The Russian Revolution: 1917–1921. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Leggett, George. The Cheka. Lenin's Political Police: The All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage. Oxford and New York, 1981.Google Scholar
Lehti, Marko. “The Baltic League and the Idea of Limited Sovereignty.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 45, no. 3 (1997): 450–65.Google Scholar
Lenin, V. I. Collected Works. 45 vols. Moscow, 1960–70.Google Scholar
Lieven, Dominic. Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire. New York, 1994.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T. Bread and Authority in Russia, 1914–1921. Berkeley, 1990.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “The Ironic Triumph of Old Bolshevism: The Debates of April 1917 in Context.” Russian History 38, no. 2 (2011): 199242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. Lenin. London, 2011.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “Lenin and Bolshevism,” in The Oxford Handbook of Communism, ed. Smith, S.A., Oxford, 2014, 5372.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “Letter from Afar, Corrections from Up Close: The Bolshevik Consensus of March 1917.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 799834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lincoln, W. Bruce. Passage through Armageddon: The Russians in War and Revolution, 1914–1918. New York, 1986.Google Scholar
Lindenmeyr, Adele. “‘The First Woman in Russia’: Countess Sofia Panina and Women's Political Participation in the Revolutions of 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 158–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohr, Eric, Vera, Tolz, Alexander, Semyonov, and Mark von, Hagen, eds. The Empire and Nationalism at War. Bloomington, IN, 2014.Google Scholar
Longley, David A.The Divisions in the Bolshevik Party in March 1917.” Soviet Studies 24, no. 1 (1972–73): 6176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longley, David A.. “The Mezhraionka, the Bolsheviks and International Women's Day: In Response to Michael Melancon.” Soviet Studies 41 (1989): 625–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longley, David A.. “Officers and Men: A Study of the Development of Political Attitudes among the Sailors of the Baltic Fleet in 1917.” Soviet Studies 25, no. 1 (1973): 2850.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. The Bolsheviks’ “German Gold” Revisited: An Inquiry into the 1917 Accusations. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies 1106. Pittsburgh, 1995.Google Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. “On the Problem of ‘Indecisiveness’ among the Duma Leaders during the February Revolution: The Imperial Decree of Prorogation and the Decision to Convene the Private Meeting of 27 February 1917.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 24 (1997): 115–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. “Conspiracy and Ambition in Russian Politics before the February Revolution of 1917: The Case of Prince Georgii Evgen'evich L'vov.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 8 (2015): 99133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. The Fall of Tsarism: Untold Stories of the February 1917 Revolution, 2nd ed., Oxford, 2014.Google Scholar
Magosci, Paul. A History of Ukraine: The Land and Its People. 2nd edn. Toronto, 2010.Google Scholar
Mally, Lynn. The Culture of the Future: The Proletkult Movement in Revolutionary Russia 1917–1922. Berkeley, 1990.Google Scholar
Mandel, David. Petrograd Workers and the Fall of the Old Regime: From the February Revolution to the July Days, 1917. London, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mandel, David. The Petrograd Workers and the Soviet Seizure of Power: From the July Days 1917 to July 1918. London, 1984.Google Scholar
Manning, Roberta.Bolsheviks without the Party: Sychevka in 1917.” In Raleigh, Donald J., ed., Provincial Landscapes: Local Dimensions of Soviet Power, 1917–1935, 3658. Pittsburgh, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marot, John Eric. “Class Conflict, Political Competition and Social Transformation: Critical Perspectives on the Social History of the Russian Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 7 (1994): 111–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mawdsley, Evan. The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: War and Politics, February 1917–April 1918. London, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayzel, Matitiahu. Generals and Revolutionaries. The Russian General Staff during the Revolution: A Study in the Transformation of the Military Elite. Osnabruck, 1979.Google Scholar
McAuley, Mary. Bread and Justice: State and Society in Petrograd, 1917–1922. Oxford, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCauley, Martin. The Russian Revolution and the Soviet State, 1917–1921: Documents. London, 1975.Google Scholar
McDaniel, Tim. Autocracy, Capitalism, and Revolution in Russia. Berkeley and London, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKean, Robert B. St. Petersburg between the Revolutions: Workers and Revolutionaries, June 1907–February 1917. New Haven and London, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNeal, Robert H., ed. Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Vol. 1, ed. Elwood, Ralph C.; vol. 2, ed. Gregor, Richard. Toronto, 1974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “From Rhapsody to Threnody: Russia's Provisional Government in Socialist-Revolutionary Eyes, February–July 1917.” Soviet and Post–Soviet Review 24 (1997): 2780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. From the Head of Zeus: The Petrograd Soviet's Rise and First Days, 27 February–2 March 1917. Pittsburg, 2009. (Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. 2004).Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “International Women's Day, the Finland Station Proclamation, and the February Revolution: A Reply to Longley and White.” Soviet Studies 42, no. 3 (1990): 583–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “The Left Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Uprising.” In The Bolsheviks in Russian Society, ed. Brovkin, Vladimir, 5980. New Haven, 1997.Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Russian Anti-war Movement, 1914–1917. Columbus, OH, 1990.Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “Soldiers, Peasant-Soldiers, Peasant-Workers and Their Organizations in Petrograd: Ground-Level Revolution in the Early Months of 1917.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 161–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “The Syntax of Soviet Power: The Resolutions of Local Soviets and Other Institutions, March–October 1917.” Russian Review 52, no. 4 (1993): 486505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “Who Wrote What and When? Proclamations of the February Revolution in Petrograd, 23 February–1 March 1971.” Soviet Studies 42, no. 3 (1988): 479500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael and Pate, Alice K., eds. New Labor History: Worker Identity and Experience in Russia, 1840–1918. Bloomington, IN, 2002.Google Scholar
Miliukov, P. N. The Russian Revolution. Trans. Stites, Richard and Hamburg, Gary. 3 vols. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1978–87.Google Scholar
Moss, Kenneth. Jewish Renaissance in the Russian Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 2009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mstislavskii, Sergei. Five Days Which Transformed Russia. Trans. Zelensky, E. K.. London, 1988.Google Scholar
Munck, J. L. The Kornilov Revolt: A Critical Examination of the Sources and Research. Aarhus, 1987.Google Scholar
Murgul, Yalcin, “Bolshevik Vanguard in Action: The Case of the Baku Sovnrkom, 1917–1918.” Revolutionary Russia 29, no. 1 (June 2016): 6691.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nabokov, Vladimir. Nabokov and the Russian Provisional Government, 1917. Ed. Medlin, Virgil and Parsons, Steven. New Haven, 1976.Google Scholar
Nabokov, Vladimir. The Nicky-Sunny Letters: Correspondence of the Tsar and the Tsaritsa, 1914–1917. (Reprint of The Letters of the Tsar to the Tsaritsa, 1914–1917 [1929] and The Letters of the Tsaritsa to the Tsar, 1914–1916 [1923].) Gulf Breeze, FL, 1970.Google Scholar
Norton, Barbara T.Laying the Foundation of Democracy in Russia: E. D. Kuskova's Contribution, February–October 1917.” In Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. Edmondson, Linda, 101–23. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Novikova, Liudmila. “The Russian Revolution from a Provincial Perspective.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 769785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “Corporatism or Democracy: The Russian Provisional Government of 1917.”Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 24 (1997): 1526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “The Lower Middle Strata in Revolutionary Russia.” In Between Tsar and People, eds. Kassow, Clowes and West, , 248–68.Google Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “Reform during Revolution: Governing the Provinces in 1917.” In Reform in Russia and the USSR: Past and Prospects, ed. Crummey, Robert O., 100–25. Urbana and Chicago, 1989.Google Scholar
Page, Stanley W. The Formation of the Baltic States: A Study of the Effects of Great Power Politics upon the Emergence of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Cambridge, MA, 1959.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Page, Stanley W.. “Lenin's April Theses and the Latvian Peasant-Soldiery.” In Reconsiderations on the Russian Revolution, ed. Elwood, R. C., 154–72. Cambridge, MA, 1976.Google Scholar
Paleologue, Maurice. An Ambassador's Memoirs. Trans. Holt, F. A.. 3 vols. 2nd edn. London, 1923.Google Scholar
Pares, Bernard. My Russian Memoirs. London, 1931.Google Scholar
Parming, Tonu. “Population and Ethnicity as Intervening Variables in the 1905/1917 Revolutions in the Russian Baltic Provinces.” In Ezergailis and von Pistohlkors, Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 119.Google Scholar
Pearson, Raymond. The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of Tsarism 1914–1917. London, 1977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.The Idea of Siberian Regionalism in Late Imperial and Revolutionary Russia.” Russian History 20, nos. 1–4 (1993): 163–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.. “Regional Consciousness in Siberia Before and After October 1917.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 30, no. 1 (1988): 112–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.. White Siberia: The Politics of Civil War. Montreal, 1996.Google Scholar
Pethybridge, Roger W.Political Repercussions of the Supply Problem in the Russian Revolution of 1917.” Russian Review 29, no. 4 (1970): 379402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pethybridge, Roger W. The Spread of the Russian Revolution: Essays on 1917. London, 1972.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Hugh. “‘A Bad Business’: The February Revolution in Tver.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 123–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Hugh. “The Heartland Turns Red: The Bolshevik Seizure of Power in Tver.” Revolutionary Russia 14, no. 1 (2001): 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pipes, Richard. The Formation of the Soviet Union: Communism and Nationalism, 1917–1923. Revised edn. Cambridge, MA, 1964.Google Scholar
Pipes, Richard, ed. Revolutionary Russia. London, 1968.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitcher, Harvey. Witnesses to the Russian Revolution. London, 1994.Google Scholar
Plokhy, Serhii. Unmaking Imperial Russia: Mykhailo Hrushevsky and the Writing of Ukrainian History. Toronto, 2005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, Morgan Phillips. My Reminiscences of the Russian Revolution. London, 1921.Google Scholar
Procyk, Anna. “Russian Liberals and the Nationality Question during the Revolution.” Ukrainian Quarterly 53, no. 4 (1997): 323–34.Google Scholar
Procyk, Anna. “The Russian Provisional Government and Ukraine.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, no. 3–4 (1998): 257–68.Google Scholar
Protasov, L. G.The All-Russian Constituent Assembly and the Democratic Alternative.” Russian Studies in History 33, no. 3 (1994–95): 6693.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinovitch, Simon. Jewish Rights, National Rights: Nationalism and Autonomy in Late Imperial and Revolutionary Russia. Stanford, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. The Bolsheviks Come to Power: The Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New York, 1976.Google Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. The Bolsheviks in Power: The First Year of Soviet Rule in Petrograd. Bloomington, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. “The Evolution of Local Soviets in Petrograd, November 1917–June 1918: The Case of the First City District Soviet.” Slavic Review 46, no. 1 (1987): 2037.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. Prelude to Revolution: The Petrograd Bolsheviks and the July 1917 Uprising. Bloomington, 1968.Google Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H. The Agrarian Foes of Bolshevism: Promise and Default of the Russian Socialist Revolutionaries, February to October 1917. New York, 1958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H.. The Election to the Russian Constituent Assembly of 1917. Cambridge, MA, 1989.Google Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H.. The Sickle under the Hammer: The Russian Socialist Revolutionaries in the Early Months of Soviet Rule. New York, 1963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raleigh, Donald J. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca and London, 1986.Google Scholar
Raleigh, Donald J.. “Revolutionary Politics in Provincial Russia: The Tsaritsyn ‘Republic’ in 1917.” Slavic Review 40, no. 2 (1981): 194209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Read, Christopher. From Tsar to Soviets: The Russian People and Their Revolution, 1917–1921. New York, 1996.Google Scholar
Read, Christopher. Lenin: A Revolutionary Life. London, 2005.Google Scholar
Read, Christopher. War and Revolution in Russia, 1914–22. New York, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reed, John. Ten Days That Shook the World. London, 1977 (first published in 1919).Google Scholar
Remington, Thomas F. Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia: Ideology and Industrial Organization 1917–1921. Pittsburgh, 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rendle, Matthew. Defenders of the Motherland: The Tsarist Elite in Revolutionary Russia. Oxford, 2010.Google Scholar
Reshetar, John S. The Ukrainian Revolution, 1917–1920. Princeton, 1952.Google Scholar
Retish, Aaron B.Creating Peasant Citizens: Rituals of Power, Rituals of Citizenship in Viatka Province, 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 16, no. 1 (June 2003): 4767.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Retish, Aaron B.. Russia's Peasants in Revolution and Civil War: Citizenship, Identity, and the Creation of the Soviet State, 1914–1922. Cambridge, 2008.Google Scholar
Rieber, Alfred J. Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Imperial Russia. Chapel Hill, NC, 1982.Google Scholar
Rigby, T. H. Lenin's Government: Sovnarkom 1917–1922. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogger, Hans. Russia in the Age of Modernisation and Revolution 1881–1917. London, 1983.Google Scholar
Roobol, W. H. Tsereteli: A Democrat in the Russian Revolution. A Political Biography. The Hague, 1976.Google Scholar
Rorlich, Azade-Ayse. The Volga Tatars: A Profile in National Resilience. Stanford, CA, 1986.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.The Democratization of Russia's Railroads in 1917.” American Historical Review 86 (1981): 9831008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. Liberals in the Russian Revolution: The Constitutional Democratic Party, 1917–1921. Princeton, 1974.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Problem of Market Relations and the State in Revolutionary Russia.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 36 (1994): 356–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Russian Labor and Bolshevik Power after October.” Slavic Review 44, no. 2 (1985): 205–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Russian Municipal Duma Elections of 1971: A Preliminary Computation of Returns.” Soviet Studies 21, no. 2 (1969–70): 131–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Social Mediation and State Construction(s) in Revolutionary Russia.” Social History 19, no. 2 (1994): 169–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Workers and Workers’ Control in the Russian Revolution.” History Workshop 5 (1978): 8997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Zemstvo in 1917 and Its Fate under Bolshevik Rule.” In The Zemstvo in Russia: An Experiment in Local Self-Government, ed. Vucinich, Wayne S., 383422. Cambridge, 1982.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G. and Koenker, Diane. “The Limits of Formal Protest: Workers’ Activism and Social Polarization in Petrograd and Moscow, March to October, 1917.” American Historical Review 2 (1987): 296326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, Edward Alsworth. Russia in Upheaval. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Ross, Edward Alsworth. The Russian Bolshevik Revolution. New York, 1921.Google Scholar
Rowley, Alison. Open Letter: Russian Popular Culture and the Picture Postcard, 1880–1922. Toronto, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rupp, Sue Zayer. The Struggle in the East: Opposition Politics in Siberia, 1918. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies 1304. Pittsburgh, 1998.Google Scholar
Russian Culture in War and Revolution, 1914–22. Book 1: Popular Culture, the Arts and Illutrations. Book 2: Popular Culture, Identities, Mentalities, and Memory. Frame, Murray, Kolonitskii, Boris, Marks, Steven G., and Stockdale, Melissa K., eds. Bloomington, IN, 2014.Google Scholar
Russia's Failed Democratic Revolution, February-October 1917: A Centennial Reappraisal. Special issue of the Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography, Lyandres, Semion ed. (vol. 9, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russia's Home Front in War and Revolution, 1914–22. Book 1, Russia's Revolution in Regional Perspective, Badcock, Sarah, Novikova, Liudmila G., and Retish, Aaron B., eds.; Book 2: The Experience of War and Revolution, Lindenmeyr, Adele, Read, Christopher, and Waldron, Peter, eds., Bloomington, IN., 2015, 2016.Google Scholar
Ruthchild, Rochelle Goldberg. Equality and Revolution: Women's Rights in the Russian Empire, 1905–1917. Pittsburg, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sack, A. J. The Birth of Russian Democracy. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Sahadeo, Jeff. Russian Colonial Society in Tashkent, 1865–1923. Bloomington, IN, 2007.Google Scholar
Sanborn, Joshua A. Drafting the Russian Nation: Military Conscription, Total War, and Mass Politics, 1905–1925. DeKalb, 2003.Google Scholar
Sanders, Jonathan. Russia 1917: The Unpublished Revolution. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Sargeant, Elena. “Reappraisal of the Russian Revolution in Contemporary Russian Historiography.” Revolutionary Russia 10, no. 1 (1997): 3554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saul, Norman E. Sailors in Revolt: The Russian Baltic Fleet in 1917. Lawrence, KS, 1978.Google Scholar
Selunskaia, N. B.Levels of Technology and the Use of Hired Labor in the Peasant and Manorial Economy of European Russia in 1917.” Russian Review 47, no. 4 (1988): 409–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Service, Robert. The Bolshevik Party in Revolution: A Study in Organisational Change, 1917–1923. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Service, Robert. Lenin: A Biography. London, 2000.Google Scholar
Service, Robert. Lenin: A Political Life. 3 vols. London, 1985–94.Google Scholar
Service, Robert. The Russian Revolution 1900–1929. 4th edn. Basingstoke and London, 2009.Google Scholar
Service, Robert, ed. Society and Politics in the Russian Revolution. Basingstoke and London, 1992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shkliarevsky, Gennady. Labor in the Russian Revolution: Factory Committees and Trade Unions, 1917–1918. New York, 1993.Google Scholar
Shklovsky, Viktor. A Sentimental Journey: Memoirs, 1917–1921. Trans. Sheldon, Richard. Ithaca and London, 1984.Google Scholar
Shlapentokh, Dmitry. The Counter-Revolution in Revolution: Images of Thermidor and Napoleon at the Time of the Russian Revolution and Civil War. New York, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shukman, Harold, ed. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Russian Revolution. Oxford, 1988.Google Scholar
Shulgin, V. V. Days of the Russian Revolution: Memoirs from the Right, 1905–1917. Trans. Adams, B. F.. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1990.Google Scholar
Siegelbaum, Lewis. The Politics of Industrial Mobilization in Russia, 1914–1917. London and New York, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slusser, Robert H. Stalin in October: The Man Who Missed the Revolution. Baltimore and London, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smele, Jonathan D. The Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917–1921: An Annotated Bibliography. London and New York, 2003.Google Scholar
Smele, Jonathan D.. The “Russian” Civil Wars, 1916–1926: Ten Years That Shook the World. London, 2015.Google Scholar
Smith, Nathan. “The Role of Russian Freemasonry in the February Revolution: Another Scrap of Evidence.” Slavic Review 27, no. 4 (1968): 604–08.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.Craft Consciousness, Class Consciousness: Petrograd 1917.” History Workshop 11 (1981): 3358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. Red Petrograd: Revolution in the Factories, 1917–1918. Cambridge, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. “Writing the History of the Russian Revolution after the Fall of Communism.” Europe-Asia Studies 46 (1994): 563–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. “Moral Economy and Peasant Revolution in Russia, 1861–1918.” Revolutionary Russia 24, no. 2 (2011): 143171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snow, Russell E. The Bolsheviks in Siberia, 1917–March 1918. Rutherford, NJ, 1975.Google Scholar
Spence, Richard. Boris Savinkov, Renegade on the Left. Boulder, CO, 1991.Google Scholar
Startsev, V. I.Lenin in October of 1917.” Soviet Studies in History 27, no. 2 (1988–89): 86113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Startsev, V. I.. “The Question of Power in the October Days of 1917.” Soviet Studies in History 27, no. 2 (1988–89): 3655.Google Scholar
Steinberg, Mark D. The Fall of the Romanovs: Political Dreams and Personal Struggles in a Time of Revolution. New Haven, 1995.Google Scholar
Steinberg, Mark D.. Voices of Revolution, 1917. New Haven, 2001.Google Scholar
Stites, Richard. Revolutionary Dreams: Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. New York and Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Stites, Richard. The Women's Liberation Movement in Russia: Feminism, Nihilism, and Bolshevism, 1860–1930. Princeton, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockdale, Melissa Kirschke. Paul Miliukov and the Quest for a Liberal Russia, 1880–1918. Ithaca, 1996.Google Scholar
Stockdale, Melissa Kirschke. “‘My Death for the Motherland Is Happiness’: Women, Patriotism, and Soldiering in Russia's Great War, 1914–1917.” American Historical Review 109, no. 1 (February 2004): 78116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoff, Laurie. They Fought for the Motherland: Russia's Women Soldiers in World War I and the Revolution. Lawrence, KS, 2006.Google Scholar
Stojko, Wolodymyr. “The Ukrainian Central Rada and the Bolsheviks.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, nos. 3–4 (1998): 269–81.Google Scholar
Stone, Bailey. The Anatomy of Revolution Revisited: A Comparative Analysis of England, France, and Russia. Cambridge, 2014.Google Scholar
Stone, David R. The Russian Army in the Great War: The Eastern Front, 1914–1917. Lawrence, KS, 2015.Google Scholar
Stone, Norman. The Eastern Front 1914–1917. London, 1975.Google Scholar
Struve, P. B. Food Supply in Russia during the World War. New Haven, 1930.Google Scholar
Sukhanov, N. N. The Russian Revolution 1917: A Personal Record. 2 vols. Trans. Carmichael, J.. London, 1955.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Baku Commune, 1917–1918: Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution. Princeton, 1972.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Nationalism and Social Class in the Russian Revolution: The Cases of Baku and Tiflis.” In Transcaucasia. Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, ed. Suny, , 241–60. 2nd edn. Ann Arbor, MI, 1996.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Nationality and Class in the Russian Revolutions of 1917 : A Reexamination of Social Categories.” In Stalinism: Its Nature and Aftermath: Essays in Honor of Moshe Lenin, ed. Lampert, Nick and Rittersporn, Gabor, 211–41. Armonk, NY, 1992.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Revenge of the Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union. Stanford, CA, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Revision and Retreat in the Historiography of 1917: Social History and Its Critics.” Russian Review 53 (1994): 155–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Toward a Social History of the October Revolution.” American Historical Review 88 (1983): 3152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. “Before the Fighting Started: A Discussion on the Theme of ‘The Third Way.”’ Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 2 (December 1991): 210–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. The Origins of the Russian Civil War. London, 1996.Google Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. Trotsky and the Russian Revolution. London, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swietochowski, Tadeusz. Russian Azerbaijan, 1905–1920. Cambridge, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “Memoirs of the Russian Provisional Government,” Revolutionary Russia 27, no. 1 (June 2014): 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “The St. Petersburg/Petrograd Mezhraionka, 1913–1917; The Rise and Fall of a Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party Unity Faction.” Slavonic and East European Review 87, no. 2 (April 2009), 284321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “Scripting the Russian Revolution,” in Scripting Revolution, ed. Baker, Keith Michael and Edelstein, Dan, Stanford, 2015, 213227, 399402.Google Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. Trotsky. London, 2003.Google Scholar
Thompson, John H. Revolutionary Russia, 1917. 2nd edn. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Tirado, Isabela A. Young Guard: The Communist Youth League, Petrograd 1917–1920. Westport, CT, New York and London, 1988.Google Scholar
Tribunskii, Pavel A.The Riazan Zemstvo in the February Revolution.” Russian Studies in History 38, no. 2 (Fall, 1999): 4865.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trotsky, L. D. History of the Russian Revolution. 3 vols. New York, 1932.Google Scholar
Tseretelli [Tsereteli], I.Reminiscences of the February Revolution: The April Crisis.” Russian Review 14 (1955): 93108, 184200, 301–21; 15 (1956): 37–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyrkova-Williams, Ariadna. From Liberty to Brest-Litovsk. London, 1919; reprint, Westport, CT, 1977.Google Scholar
Ulam, Adam. The Bolsheviks. New York, 1965.Google Scholar
Uldricks, Teddy J.The Crowd in the Russian Revolution: Towards Reassessing the Nature of Revolutionary Leadership.” Politics and Society 4, no. 3 (1974): 397413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Upton, Anthony F. The Finnish Revolution 1917–1918. Minneapolis, 1980.Google Scholar
Varneck, E.Siberian Native Peoples After the February Revolution.” Slavonic and East European Review 21 (1942–44): 7088.Google Scholar
Velychenko, Stephen. State Building in Revolutionary Ukraine: A Comparative Study of Governments and Bureaucrats, 1917–1922. Toronto, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vernadsky, George, ed. A Source Book for Russian History from Early Times to 1917. Vol. 3. New Haven, 1972.Google Scholar
Verstiuk, Vladyslav. “Conceptual Issues in Studying the History of the Ukrainian Revolution.” Journal of Ukrainian Studies 24, no. 1 (1999): 520.Google Scholar
Volobuev, P. V.The Mensheviks in the Fall of 1917: Decisions and Consequences.” In The Bolsheviks in Russian Society, ed. Brovkin, Vladimir, 4358. New Haven, 1997.Google Scholar
Von Hagen, Mark. Soldiers in the Proletarian Dictatorship: The Red Army and the Soviet Socialist State, 1917–1930. Ithaca and London, 1990.Google Scholar
Von Hagen, Mark. “The Russian Imperial Army and the Ukrainian National Movement in 1917.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, no. 3–4 (1998): 220–56.Google Scholar
Von Laue, Theodore. “Westernization, Revolution and the Search for a Basis of Authority: Russia in 1917.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 2 (October 1967): 156–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Von Laue, Theodore. Why Lenin? Why Stalin? A Reappraisal of the Russian Revolution, 1900–1930. Philadelphia, 1964 and later edns.Google Scholar
Wada, Haruki. “The Russian February Revolution of 1917.” Annals of the Institute of Social Science, no. 15 (1974): 72–94.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Argonauts of Peace: The Soviet Delegation to Western Europe in the Summer of 1917.” Slavic Review 26, no. 3 (1967): 453–67.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Documents of Soviet History, vol. 1, The Triumph of Bolshevism, 1917–1919. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1991.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Irakli Tsereteli and Siberian Zimmerwaldism.” Journal of Modern History 39, no. 4 (December 1967): 425–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Rajonnye Sovety of Petrograd: The Role of Local Political Bodies in the Russian Revolution.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 20 (1972): 226–40.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Red Guards and Workers’ Militias in the Russian Revolution. Stanford, CA, 1984.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Revolution at One Hundred: Issues and Trends in the English Language Historiography of the Russian Revolution.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Revolution in the Provinces: Khar'kov and the Varieties of Response to the October Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 1 (1991): 132–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Revolutionary Russia; New Approaches. New York and London, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. The Russian Search for Peace, February–October 1917. Stanford, 1969.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Ukrainian Nationalism and Soviet Power: Kharkiv, 1917.” In Ukrainian Past, Ukrainian Present, ed. Krawchenko, Bohdan, 7083. New York, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warth, Robert A. The Allies and the Russian Revolution: From the Fall of the Monarchy to the Peace of Brest-Litovsk. Durham, NC, 1954.Google Scholar
Warth, Robert A.. Nicholas II: The Life and Reign of Russia's Last Monarch. Westport, CT, 1997.Google Scholar
White, Howard. “Civil Rights and the Provisional Government.” In Civil Rights in Imperial Russia, ed. Edmondson, Olga Crispand Linda, 287312. Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
White, Howard. “1917 in the Rear Garrisons.” In Economy and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, 1860–1930, ed. Edmondson, L. and Waldron, P., 152–68. Basingstoke and London, 1992.Google Scholar
White, James D.The February Revolution and the Bolshevik Vyborg District Committee (in Response to Michael Melancon).” Soviet Studies 41, no. 4 (1989): 603–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. “The Kornilov Affair: A Study in Counter Revolution.” Soviet Studies 20, no. 2 (1968–69): 187205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. Lenin: The Practice and Theory of Revolution. London, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. “Lenin, Trotskii and the Arts of Insurrection: The Congress of Soviets of the Northern Region, 11–13 October 1917.” Slavonic and East European Review 77, no. 1 (January 1999): 117–39.Google Scholar
White, James D.. The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921: A Short History. New York, 1994.Google Scholar
White, James D.. “The Sormovo-Nikolaev Zemlyachestvo in the February Revolution.” Soviet Studies 31, no. 4 (1979): 475504.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wildman, Allan K. The End of the Russian Imperial Army: The Old Army and the Soldiers’ Revolt (March–April 1917). Princeton, 1980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wildman, Allan K.. The End of the Russian Imperial Army: The Road to Soviet Power and Peace. Princeton, 1987.Google Scholar
Williams, Albert Rhys. Journey into Revolution: Petrograd, 1917–1918. Chicago, 1969.Google Scholar
Williams, Beryl. The Russian Revolution 1917–1921. Oxford, 1987.Google Scholar
Yekelchyk, Serhy. Ukraine: Birth of a Modern Nation. Oxford, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zeman, Z. A. B., ed. Germany and the Revolution in Russia, 1915–1918: Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry. London, 1958.Google Scholar
Zemelis, Sigurds. “Latvia on the Way to October.” In Ezergailis and von Pistohlkors, Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 257–64.Google Scholar
Zenkovsky, Sergei A. Pan-Turkism and Islam in Russia. Cambridge, MA, 1960.Google Scholar
Znamenskii, O. N.The Petrograd Intelligentsia during the February RevolutionSoviet Studies in History 23, no. 1 (1984–85): 3955.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zohrab, I.The Socialist Revolutionary Party, Kerensky and the Kornilov Affair: From the Unpublished Papers of Harold W. Williams.” New Zealand Slavonic Journal (1991): 131–61.Google Scholar
Abraham, Richard. Alexander Kerensky: The First Love of the Revolution. New York, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abraham, Richard. “Mariia L. Bochkareva and the Russian Amazons of 1917.” In Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. Edmondson, Linda, 124–44. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Abramson, Henry. A Prayer for the Government: Ukrainians and Jews in Revolutionary Times, 1917–1920. Cambridge, MA, 1999.Google Scholar
Abrosimov, T. A.The Composition of the Petersburg Committee of the RSDRP(b) in 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 11, no. 1 (1998): 3744.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Acton, Edward. Rethinking the Russian Revolution. London, 1990.Google Scholar
Alapuro, R. State and Revolution in Finland. Berkeley, CA, 1988.Google Scholar
Allworth, E.The Search for Group Identity in Turkistan, March 1917–September 1922.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 17, no. 4 (1983): 487502.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anweiler, Oskar K. The Soviets: The Russian Workers, Peasants and Soldiers Councils, 1905–1921. Trans. Hein, R.. New York, 1974.Google Scholar
Arens, Olavi.The Estonian Maapaev during 1917.” In The Baltic States in Peace and War, 1917–1945, ed. Vardys, V. Stanley and Misiunas, Romuald J., 1930. University Park, PA, 1978.Google Scholar
Arens, Olavi. “Soviets in Estonia 1917–1918.” In Ezergailis, and von Pistohlkors, , Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 294319.Google Scholar
Ascher, Abraham. “The Kornilov Affair.” Russian Review 12, no. 4 (1953): 235–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ascher, Abraham, ed. The Mensheviks in the Russian Revolution. London, 1976.Google Scholar
Asher, Harvey. “The Kornilov Affair: A History and Interpretation.” Russian Review 29, no. 3 (1970): 286300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, Tony. “Soldiers Not Peasants: The Moral Basis of the February Revolution of 1917.” Sociology 26 (August 1992): 455–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aun, Karl. “The 1917 Revolutions and the Idea of the State in Estonia.” In Ezergailis, and von Pistohlkors, , Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 286–93.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution.” Russian Review 26, no. 4 (1967): 341–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “The Bolshevik Revolution and Workers’ Control in Russian Industry.” Slavic Review 22 (1963): 4763.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avrich, Paul. The Russian Anarchists. Princeton, 1967.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul. “Russian Factory Committees in 1917.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 11 (1963): 161–82.Google Scholar
Avrich, Paul., ed. The Anarchists in the Russian Revolution. London, 1973.Google Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “‘We're for the Muzhiks’ Party!’ Peasant Support for the Socialist Revolutionary Party During 1917.” Europe-Asia Studies 53, no. 1 (2001): 133–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “Personal and Political Networks in 1917: Vladimir Zenzinov and the Socialist Revolutionary Party.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 131–57.Google Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. Politics and the People in Revolutionary Russia: A Provincial History. Cambridge, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badcock, Sarah. “Women, Protest, and Revolution: Soldiers’ Wives in Russia during 1917.” International Review of Social History 49, no. 1 (2004): 4770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, Mark. Peasants, Power, and Place: Revolution in the Villages of Kharkiv Province, 1914–1921. Cambridge, MA, 2016.Google Scholar
Baker, Mark. “Rampaging Soldaki, Cowering Police, Riots and Moral Economy: The Social Impact of the Great War in Kharkiv Province.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 3(2001):137155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basil, John D. The Mensheviks in the Revolution of 1917. Columbus, OH, 1983.Google Scholar
The Bolsheviks and the October Revolution: Minutes of the Central Committee of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks), August 1917–February 1918. Trans. Bone, Anne. London, 1974.Google Scholar
Borys, Jurij. “Political Parties in the Ukraine.” In Hunczak, , Ukraine, 128–58.Google Scholar
Boyd, J. R.The Origins of Order No. 1.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 3 (1968): 359–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinton, Maurice. The Bolsheviks and Workers’ Control, 1917–1921: The State and Counterrevolution. Montreal, 1975.Google Scholar
Brovkin, Vladimir N. The Mensheviks after October: Socialist Opposition and the Rise of the Bolshevik Dictatorship. Ithaca, 1987.Google Scholar
Browder, Robert Paul and Kerensky, Alexander F., eds. The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents. 3 vols. Stanford, CA, 1961.Google Scholar
Bryant, Louise. Six Red Months in Russia. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Buchanan, George. My Mission to Russia and Other Diplomatic Memories. 2 vols. London, 1923.Google Scholar
Budnitskii, Oleg. Russian Jews between the Reds and the Whites, 1917–1920. Philadelphia, 2012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buldakov, V. P.Scholarly Passions around the Myth of ‘Great October’: Results of the Past Decade.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2, no. 2 (2001): 295305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buldakov, V. P.. “Soldiers and Changes in the Psychology of the Peasantry and the Legal and Political Consciousness in Russia, 1914–1923.” The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 27, nos. 2–3 (2000): 217–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bunyan, James and Fisher, H. H., eds. The Bolshevik Revolution 1917–1918: Documents and Materials. Stanford, CA, 1934; reprinted 1961, 1965.Google Scholar
Burdzhalov, E. N.Revolution in Moscow.” Soviet Studies in History 26 (1987–88): 10100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burdzhalov, E. N.. Russia's Second Revolution: The February 1917 Uprising in Petrograd. Trans. and ed. Raleigh, Donald J.. Bloomington, 1987.Google Scholar
Carr, Edward Hallett. The Bolshevik Revolution, 1917–1923. 3 vols. London, 1950–53.Google Scholar
Carrère d'Encausse, Hélène. Islam and the Russian Empire: Reform and Revolution in Central Asia. Trans. Hoare, Quintin. Berkeley, 1998.Google Scholar
Chamberlin, William Henry. The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921. 2 vols. New York, 1935; reprint, Princeton, 1987.Google Scholar
Channon, John. “The Bolsheviks and the Peasantry: The Land Question during the First Eight Months of Soviet Rule.” Slavonic and East European Review 64, no. 4 (1988): 593624.Google Scholar
Chase, William and Getty, J. Arch. “The Moscow Bolshevik Cadres of 1917: A Prosopographical Analysis.” Russian History 5 (1978): 84105.Google Scholar
Chernov, Victor. The Great Russian Revolution. New Haven, 1936.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. Bolshevik Feminist: The Life of Aleksandra Kollontai. Bloomington, 1979.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. Bolshevik Women. Cambridge, 1997.Google Scholar
Clements, Barbara Evans. “Working-Class and Peasant Women in the Russian Revolution, 1917–1923.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 8, no. 2 (1982): 215–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clowes, Edith W., Kassow, Samuel D. and West, James L., eds. Between Tsar and People: Educated Society and the Quest for Public Identity in Late Imperial Russia. Princeton, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, Aaron J. Imagining the Unimaginable: World War, Modern Art, and the Politics of Public Culture in Russia, 1914–1917. Lincoln, NE and London, 2008.Google Scholar
Cohen, Stephen F. Bukharin and the Bolshevik Revolution: A Political Biography, 1888–1938. New York, 1973.Google Scholar
Collins, D. N.Kabinet, Forest and Revolution in the Siberian Altai to May 1918.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 1 (1991): 127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, D. N.. “A Note on the Numerical Strength of the Russian Red Guard in October 1917.” Soviet Studies 24, no. 2 (October 1972): 270–80.Google Scholar
Corney, Frederick. Telling October: Memory and the Making of the Bolshevik Revolution. Ithaca and London, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corney, Frederick. Critical Companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914–1921. Ed. Acton, Edward, Cherniaev, Vladimir Iu. and Rosenberg, William G.. Bloomington, 1997.Google Scholar
Cross, Truman B.Purposes of Revolution: Chernov and 1917.” Russian Review 26, no. 4 (1967): 351–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cumming, C. K. and Pettit, Walter W., eds. Russian–American Relations, March, 1917–March, 1920: Documents and Papers. New York, 1920.Google Scholar
Daly, Jonathan. “Machine Guns, Hysteria, and the February Revolution.” Russian History 36, no. 1 (2009): 141155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daly, Jonathan and Trofimov, Leonid. Russia in War and Revolution, 1914–1922. A Documentary History. Indianapolis, 2009.Google Scholar
Daniels, Robert V. The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia. Cambridge, MA, 1960.Google Scholar
Daniels, Robert V.. Red October: The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. New York, 1967.Google Scholar
Debo, Richard K. Revolution and Survival: The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia, 1917–1918. Toronto, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denikin, Anton Ivanovich. The Russian Turmoil: Memoirs Military, Social, and Political. London, 1922.Google Scholar
Dickins, Alistair. “Rethinking the Power of Soviets: Krasnoiarsk, March–October 1917. Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 223–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dmitriev, Mikhail E.Riazan Diocese in 1917.” Russian Studies in History 38, no. 2 (Fall 1999): 6682.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donald, Moira. “Bolshevik Activity amongst the Working Women of Petrograd in 1917.” International Review of Social History 27, no. 9 (1982): 129–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donald, Moira. “‘What Did You Do in the Revolution, Mother?’: Image, Myth and Prejudice in Western Writing on the Russian Revolution.” Gender and History 7, no. 1 (April 1995): 8599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dune, E. M. Notes of a Red Guard. Trans. Koenker, Diane and Smith, S. A.. Urbana, 1993.Google Scholar
Duval, Charles. “The Bolshevik Secretariat and Yakov Sverdlov: February to October 1917.” Slavic and East European Studies 122 (1973): 4757.Google Scholar
Duval, Charles. “Yakov M. Sverdlov and the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of Soviets (VTsIK): A Study in Bolshevik Consolidation of Power.” Soviet Studies 31, no. 1 (1979): 322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edmondson, Linda Harriet. Feminism in Russia, 1900–1917. Stanford, CA, 1984.Google Scholar
Elwood, Ralph Carter, ed. Reconsiderations on the Russian Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 1976.Google Scholar
Engel, Barbara Alpern. “Not by Bread Alone: Subsistence Riots in Russia during World War I.”Journal of Modern History 69 (1997): 696721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evtuhov, Catherine. “The Church in the Russian Revolution: Arguments for and against Restoring the Patriarchate at the Church Council of 1917–1918.” Slavic Review 50 (1991): 497511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. “The Latvian ‘Autonomy’ Conference of 30 July 1917.” Journal of Baltic Studies 8, no. 2 (1977): 162–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. The Latvian Impact on the Bolshevik Revolution: The First Phase, September 1917 to April 1918. New York, 1983.Google Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. The 1917 Revolution in Latvia. New York, 1974.Google Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew. “The Provisional Government and the Latvians in 1917.” Nationalities Papers 3, no. 1 (1975): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ezergailis, Andrew and von Pistohlkors, Gert, eds. Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands zwischen den Revolutionen von 1905 und 1917. Cologne and Vienna, 1982.Google Scholar
Farnsworth, Beatrice. Aleksandra Kollontai: Socialism, Feminism and the Bolshevik Revolution. Stanford, CA, 1980.Google Scholar
Feldman, Robert S.The Russian General Staff and the June 1917 Offensive.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 4 (1968): 526–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferro, Marc. October 1917: A Social History of the Russian Revolution. London, 1980.Google Scholar
Ferro, Marc. The Russian Revolution of February 1917. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1972.Google Scholar
Ferro, Marc. “The Russian Soldier in 1917: Patriotic, Undisciplined and Revolutionary.” Slavic Review 30 (1971): 483512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figes, Orlando. Peasant Russia, Civil War: The Volga Countryside in Revolution, 1917–1921. Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando. A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando. “The Russian Revolution and Its Language in the Village.” Russian Review 56, no. 3 (1997): 323–45.Google Scholar
Figes, Orlando and Kolonitskii, Boris. Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917. New Haven and London, 1999.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Russian Revolution. 4nd edition. Oxford, 2007.Google Scholar
Fleishauer, J.The Agrarian Program of the Russian Constitutional Democrats.” Cahiers du monde russe et soviétique 20 (1979): 179201.Google Scholar
Flenley, Paul. “Industrial Relations and the Economic Crisis of 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 2 (1991): 184209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Florinsky, Michael T. The End of the Russian Empire. New York, 1961.Google Scholar
Frame, Murray, comp. The Russian Revolution, 1905–1921: A Bibliographic Guide to Works in English. Westport, CT, 1995.Google Scholar
Frame, Murray. “Theatre and Revolution in 1917: The Case of the Petrograd State Theatres.” Revolutionary Russia 12, no. 1 (June 1999): 84102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francis, David Rowland. Russia from the American Embassy, April, 1916–November, 1918. New York, 1921.Google Scholar
Frankel, Edith Rogovin, Frankel, Jonathan and Knei-Paz, Baruch, eds. Revolution in Russia: Reassessments of 1917. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Friedgut, Theodore. Iuzovka and Revolution. 2 vols. Princeton, 1994.Google Scholar
Gaida, Fedor A.February 1917: Revolution, Power, and the Bourgeoisie.” Russian Studies in History 41, no. 4 (Spring 2003): 930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaida, Fedor A.. “The Provisional Government's Mechanism of Power (March–April, 1917).” Russian Studies in History 41, no. 4 (Spring 2003): 5272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galili, Ziva. The Menshevik Leaders in the Russian Revolution: Social Realities and Political Strategies. Princeton, 1989.Google Scholar
Galili, Ziva. “The Origins of Revolutionary Defensism: I. G. Tsereteli and the ‘Siberian Zimmerwaldists.”’ Slavic Review 41 (September 1982): 454–76.Google Scholar
Gatrell, Peter. Russia's First World War: A Social and Economic History. Harlow, 2005.Google Scholar
Gerson, Leonard. The Secret Police in Lenin's Russia. Philadelphia, 1976.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. “Iulii Martov: The Leader Who Lost His Party in 1917.” Slavonic and East European Review 72, no. 3 (1994): 424–37.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Kronstadt, 1917–1921: The Fate of a Soviet Democracy. Cambridge, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Martov: A Political Biography of a Russian Social Democrat. Cambridge, MA, 1967.Google Scholar
Getzler, Israel. Nikolai Sukhanov: Chronicler of the Russian Revolution. London, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geyer, Dietrich. The Russian Revolution. Trans. Little, Bruce. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Gill, Graeme. Peasants and Government in the Russian Revolution. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleason, William. Alexander Guchkov and the End of the Russian Empire. Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society Transactions, no. 73, part 3, 1993.Google Scholar
Golder, Frank Alfred, ed. Documents of Russian History, 1914–1917. Gloucester, MA, 1964; reprint of 1927 edn.Google Scholar
Golikov, A. G.The Kerensky Phenomenon.” Russian Studies in History 33, no. 3 (1994–95): 4366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorky, Maxim. Untimely Thoughts: Essays on Revolution, Culture and the Bolsheviks, 1917–1918. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Got'e, I. V. Time of Troubles: The Diary of Iurii Vladimirovich Got'e, Moscow, July 8, 1917 to July 23, 1922. Trans. Emmons, T.. Princeton, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guthier, Steven L.The Popular Base of Ukrainian Nationalism in 1917.” Slavic Review 38, no. 1 (1979): 3047.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hafner, Lutz. “German Historiography on the February Revolution of 1917 since the Demise of the Soviet Union.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 3964.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haimson, Leopold H.The Mensheviks after the October Revolution.” Russian Review 38, no. 4 (1979): 456–73; 39, no. 2 (1980): 181–207; 39, no. 4 (1980): 462–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haimson, Leopold H.. “The Problem of Social Stability in Urban Russia.” Slavic Review 23, no. 4 (1964): 619–42; 24, no. 1 (1965): 1–22.Google Scholar
Harding, Neil. Leninism. Durham, NC, 1996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, Neil. Lenin's Political Thought: Theory and Practice in the Democratic Revolution. 2 vols. New York, 1977, 1981.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “The Bolsheviks and the Formation of the Petrograd Soviet in the February Revolution.” Soviet Studies 29, no. 1 (1977): 86197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Crime, Police, and Mob Justice in Petrograd during the Russian Revolutions of 1917.” In Religious and Secular Forces in Late Tsarist Russia: Essays in Honor of Donald W. Treadgold, ed. Timberlake, Charles E., 241–71. Seattle, 1992.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Crime, Police, and Samosudy in Petrograd in the Russian Revolution and Sociological Theories of Anomie.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 275–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. The February Revolution: Petrograd 1917. Seattle, 1981.Google Scholar
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi. “Gosudarstvennost’, Obshchestvennost’, and Klassovost’: Crime, the Police, and the State in the Russian Revolution in Petrograd. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 2–3 (2001): 157–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedlin, Myron. “Zinoviev's Revolutionary Tactics in 1917.” Slavic Review 34, no. 1 (1975): 1943.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heenan, Louise Erwin. Russian Democracy's Fateful Blunder: The Summer Offensive of 1917. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Hemenway, Elizabeth Jones. “Nicholas in Hell: Rewriting the Tsarist Narrative in the Revolutionary Skazki of 1917.” Russian Review 60, no. 2 (2001): 185204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C., ed., Competing Voices from the Russian Revolution. Santa Barbara, CA, 2011.Google Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Discourses of Public Identity and Liberalism in the February Revolution: Smolensk, Spring 1917.” Russian Review 55, no. 4 (1996): 615–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Local Government and State Authority in the Provinces: Smolensk, February–June 1917.” Slavic Review 55, no. 4 (1996): 863–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Moderate Socialists and the Politics of Crime in Revolutionary Smolensk.” Canadian-American Slavic Studies 35, no. 2–3 (2001): 189218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Paper, Memory and a Good Story: How Smolensk Got Its ‘October’.” Revolutionary Russia 13, no. 2 (2000): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Peasant Autonomy, Soviet Power and Land Distribution in Smolensk Province, November 1917–May 1918.” Revolutionary Russia 7, no. 1 (1996): 14.Google Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Revolution on the Jewish Street: Smolensk, 1917.” Journal of Social History 31, no. 4 (Summer 1998): 823–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “The Provisional Government and Local Administration in Smolensk in 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 251–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “The Rise and Fall of Smolensk's Moderate Socialists: The Politics of Class and the Rhetoric of Crisis in 1917.” In Raleigh, Donald J., ed., Provincial Landscapes: Local Dimension of Soviet Power, 1917–1935, 1435. Pittsburgh, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickey, Michael C.. “Urban Zemliachestva and Rural Revolution: Petrograd and the Smolensk Countryside in 1917.” Soviet and Post Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 143–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Himka, John-Paul. “The National and the Social in the Ukrainian Revolution of 1917–1920: The Historiographical Agenda.” Archiv für Sozialgeschichte 34 (1994): 95110.Google Scholar
Hogan, Heather. “Conciliation Boards in Revolutionary Petrograd: Aspects of the Crisis of Labor-Management Relations in 1917.” Russian History 9 (1982): 4966.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holquist, Peter. Making War, Forging Revolution: Russia's Continuum of Crisis, 1914–1921. Cambridge, MA: 2002.Google Scholar
Holubnychy, Vsevolod.The 1917 Agrarian Revolution in the Ukraine.” In Soviet Regional Economics: Selected Works of Vsevolod Holubnychy, ed. Koropeckyi, I. S., 365. Edmonton, 1982.Google Scholar
Horsbrugh-Porter, Anna, ed., Memories of Revolution: Russian Women Remember. London and New York, 1993.Google Scholar
Hosking, Geoffrey. The Russian Constitutional Experiment: Government and Duma, 1907–1914. Cambridge, 1973.Google Scholar
Hunczak, Taras, ed. The Ukraine, 1917–1921: A Study in Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 1977.Google Scholar
Husband, W. B.Local Industry in Upheaval: The Ivanovo-Kineshma Textile Strike of 1917.” Slavic Review 47, no. 3 (1988): 448–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Immonen, Hannu. “From February Revolution to Civil War: Finnish Historians and the Year 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 89105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Imranli-Lowe, Kamala. “The Provisional Government and the Armenian Homeland Project.” Revolutionary Russia 27, no. 2 (2014): 132–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, George and Devlin, Robert, eds. Dictionary of the Russian Revolution. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Janke, Arthur E.Don Cossacks and the February Revolution.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 10, no. 2 (1968): 148–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janke, Arthur E.. “The Don Cossacks on the Road to Independence.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 10, no. 3 (1968): 273–94.Google Scholar
Johnston, Robert H. Tradition versus Revolution: Russia and the Balkans in 1917. Boulder, CO, 1977.Google Scholar
Jones, David R.The Officers and the October Revolution.” Soviet Studies 28, no. 2 (1976): 207–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Josephson, Paul R.Maksim Gor'kii, Science and the Russian Revolution.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 22, no. 1 (1995): 1539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, Daniel H., ed. The Workers’ Revolution in Russia, 1917: The View from Below. Cambridge, MA, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Vera. “A Dress Rehearsal for Cultural Revolution: Bolshevik Policy towards Teachers and Education between February and October, 1917. History of Education 35, no. 4–5 (2006): 427452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Vera. “Recent Israeli Historiography of the 1917 Revolution.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 6588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katkov, George. Russia 1917: The Kornilov Affair: Kerensky and the Break-Up of the Russian Army. London, 1980.Google Scholar
Kazemzadeh, Firuz. The Struggle for Transcaucasia, 1917–1921. New York, 1951.Google Scholar
Keep, John L. H. The Russian Revolution: A Study in Mass Mobilisation. London, 1976.Google Scholar
Keep, John L. H., ed. The Debate on Soviet Power: Minutes of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of Soviets, Second Convocation, October 1917–January 1918. Oxford, 1979.Google Scholar
Kennan, George Frost. Soviet-American Relations, 1917–1920. 2 vols. Princeton, 1956, 1958.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Catastrophe: Kerensky's Own Story of the Russian Revolution. New York, 1927.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Crucifixion of Liberty. New York, 1934.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. The Prelude to Bolshevism: The Kornilov Rebellion. New York, 1919.Google Scholar
Kerensky, Alexander. Russia and History's Turning Point. New York, 1966.Google Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. The Politics of Muslim Cultural Reform: Jadidism in Central Asia. Berkeley, 1998.Google Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. Making Uzbekistan: Nation, Empire, and Revolution in the Early USSR. Ithaca, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khalid, Adeeb. “Tashkent 1917: Muslim Politics in Revolutionary Turkistan.” Slavic Review 55, no. 2 (1996): 270–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Francis. “Between Bolshevism and Menshevism: The Social-Democrat Internationalists in the Russian Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 7, no. 1 (1996): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Richard Douglas. Sergei Kirov and the Struggle for Soviet Power in the Terek Region, 1917–1918. New York, 1987.Google Scholar
Kingston-Mann, Esther. Lenin and the Problem of Marxist Peasant Revolution. New York and Oxford, 1983.Google Scholar
Knei-Paz, Baruch. The Social and Political Thought of Leon Trotsky. Oxford, 1979.Google Scholar
Knox, Sir Alfred William Fortescue. With the Russian Army, 1914–1917. London, 1921.Google Scholar
Kochan, Lionel. “Kadet Policy in 1917 and the Constitutional Assembly.” Slavonic and East European Review 45 (1967): 8392.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane. Moscow Workers and the 1917 Revolution. Princeton, 1981.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane. “Urban Families, Working-Class Youth Groups, and the 1917 Revolution in Moscow.” In The Family in Imperial Russia: New Lines of Historical Research, ed. Ransel, D. L., 280304. Urbana, 1978.Google Scholar
Koenker, Diane and Rosenberg, William G., Strikes and Revolution in Russia, 1917. Princeton, 1989.Google Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Antibourgeois Propaganda and Anti-'Burzhui’ Consciousness in 1917.” Russian Review 53, no. 2 (1994): 183–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Democracy in the Political Consciousness of the February Revolution.” Slavic Review 57, no. 1 (1998): 95106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “The ‘Russian Idea’ and the Ideology of the February Revolution.” In Empire and Society: New Approaches to Russian History, ed. Hara, Teruyuki and Matsuzato, Kimitaka, 4172. Sapporo, 1997.Google Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “On Studying the 1917 Revolution.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 75168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolonitskii, Boris. “Russian Historiography of the 1917 Revolution. New Challenges to Old Paradigms?” History and Memory 21, no. 2 (Fall/Winter 2009): 3459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kowalski, Ronald I. The Russian Revolution: 1917–1921. New York, 1997.Google Scholar
Leggett, George. The Cheka. Lenin's Political Police: The All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage. Oxford and New York, 1981.Google Scholar
Lehti, Marko. “The Baltic League and the Idea of Limited Sovereignty.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 45, no. 3 (1997): 450–65.Google Scholar
Lenin, V. I. Collected Works. 45 vols. Moscow, 1960–70.Google Scholar
Lieven, Dominic. Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire. New York, 1994.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T. Bread and Authority in Russia, 1914–1921. Berkeley, 1990.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “The Ironic Triumph of Old Bolshevism: The Debates of April 1917 in Context.” Russian History 38, no. 2 (2011): 199242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. Lenin. London, 2011.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “Lenin and Bolshevism,” in The Oxford Handbook of Communism, ed. Smith, S.A., Oxford, 2014, 5372.Google Scholar
Lih, Lars T.. “Letter from Afar, Corrections from Up Close: The Bolshevik Consensus of March 1917.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 799834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lincoln, W. Bruce. Passage through Armageddon: The Russians in War and Revolution, 1914–1918. New York, 1986.Google Scholar
Lindenmeyr, Adele. “‘The First Woman in Russia’: Countess Sofia Panina and Women's Political Participation in the Revolutions of 1917.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 158–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohr, Eric, Vera, Tolz, Alexander, Semyonov, and Mark von, Hagen, eds. The Empire and Nationalism at War. Bloomington, IN, 2014.Google Scholar
Longley, David A.The Divisions in the Bolshevik Party in March 1917.” Soviet Studies 24, no. 1 (1972–73): 6176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longley, David A.. “The Mezhraionka, the Bolsheviks and International Women's Day: In Response to Michael Melancon.” Soviet Studies 41 (1989): 625–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longley, David A.. “Officers and Men: A Study of the Development of Political Attitudes among the Sailors of the Baltic Fleet in 1917.” Soviet Studies 25, no. 1 (1973): 2850.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. The Bolsheviks’ “German Gold” Revisited: An Inquiry into the 1917 Accusations. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies 1106. Pittsburgh, 1995.Google Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. “On the Problem of ‘Indecisiveness’ among the Duma Leaders during the February Revolution: The Imperial Decree of Prorogation and the Decision to Convene the Private Meeting of 27 February 1917.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 24 (1997): 115–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. “Conspiracy and Ambition in Russian Politics before the February Revolution of 1917: The Case of Prince Georgii Evgen'evich L'vov.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 8 (2015): 99133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyandres, Semion. The Fall of Tsarism: Untold Stories of the February 1917 Revolution, 2nd ed., Oxford, 2014.Google Scholar
Magosci, Paul. A History of Ukraine: The Land and Its People. 2nd edn. Toronto, 2010.Google Scholar
Mally, Lynn. The Culture of the Future: The Proletkult Movement in Revolutionary Russia 1917–1922. Berkeley, 1990.Google Scholar
Mandel, David. Petrograd Workers and the Fall of the Old Regime: From the February Revolution to the July Days, 1917. London, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mandel, David. The Petrograd Workers and the Soviet Seizure of Power: From the July Days 1917 to July 1918. London, 1984.Google Scholar
Manning, Roberta.Bolsheviks without the Party: Sychevka in 1917.” In Raleigh, Donald J., ed., Provincial Landscapes: Local Dimensions of Soviet Power, 1917–1935, 3658. Pittsburgh, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marot, John Eric. “Class Conflict, Political Competition and Social Transformation: Critical Perspectives on the Social History of the Russian Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 7 (1994): 111–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mawdsley, Evan. The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: War and Politics, February 1917–April 1918. London, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayzel, Matitiahu. Generals and Revolutionaries. The Russian General Staff during the Revolution: A Study in the Transformation of the Military Elite. Osnabruck, 1979.Google Scholar
McAuley, Mary. Bread and Justice: State and Society in Petrograd, 1917–1922. Oxford, 1991.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCauley, Martin. The Russian Revolution and the Soviet State, 1917–1921: Documents. London, 1975.Google Scholar
McDaniel, Tim. Autocracy, Capitalism, and Revolution in Russia. Berkeley and London, 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKean, Robert B. St. Petersburg between the Revolutions: Workers and Revolutionaries, June 1907–February 1917. New Haven and London, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNeal, Robert H., ed. Resolutions and Decisions of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Vol. 1, ed. Elwood, Ralph C.; vol. 2, ed. Gregor, Richard. Toronto, 1974.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “From Rhapsody to Threnody: Russia's Provisional Government in Socialist-Revolutionary Eyes, February–July 1917.” Soviet and Post–Soviet Review 24 (1997): 2780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. From the Head of Zeus: The Petrograd Soviet's Rise and First Days, 27 February–2 March 1917. Pittsburg, 2009. (Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies, no. 2004).Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “International Women's Day, the Finland Station Proclamation, and the February Revolution: A Reply to Longley and White.” Soviet Studies 42, no. 3 (1990): 583–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “The Left Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Uprising.” In The Bolsheviks in Russian Society, ed. Brovkin, Vladimir, 5980. New Haven, 1997.Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Russian Anti-war Movement, 1914–1917. Columbus, OH, 1990.Google Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “Soldiers, Peasant-Soldiers, Peasant-Workers and Their Organizations in Petrograd: Ground-Level Revolution in the Early Months of 1917.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 161–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “The Syntax of Soviet Power: The Resolutions of Local Soviets and Other Institutions, March–October 1917.” Russian Review 52, no. 4 (1993): 486505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael. “Who Wrote What and When? Proclamations of the February Revolution in Petrograd, 23 February–1 March 1971.” Soviet Studies 42, no. 3 (1988): 479500.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Melancon, Michael and Pate, Alice K., eds. New Labor History: Worker Identity and Experience in Russia, 1840–1918. Bloomington, IN, 2002.Google Scholar
Miliukov, P. N. The Russian Revolution. Trans. Stites, Richard and Hamburg, Gary. 3 vols. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1978–87.Google Scholar
Moss, Kenneth. Jewish Renaissance in the Russian Revolution. Cambridge, MA, 2009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mstislavskii, Sergei. Five Days Which Transformed Russia. Trans. Zelensky, E. K.. London, 1988.Google Scholar
Munck, J. L. The Kornilov Revolt: A Critical Examination of the Sources and Research. Aarhus, 1987.Google Scholar
Murgul, Yalcin, “Bolshevik Vanguard in Action: The Case of the Baku Sovnrkom, 1917–1918.” Revolutionary Russia 29, no. 1 (June 2016): 6691.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nabokov, Vladimir. Nabokov and the Russian Provisional Government, 1917. Ed. Medlin, Virgil and Parsons, Steven. New Haven, 1976.Google Scholar
Nabokov, Vladimir. The Nicky-Sunny Letters: Correspondence of the Tsar and the Tsaritsa, 1914–1917. (Reprint of The Letters of the Tsar to the Tsaritsa, 1914–1917 [1929] and The Letters of the Tsaritsa to the Tsar, 1914–1916 [1923].) Gulf Breeze, FL, 1970.Google Scholar
Norton, Barbara T.Laying the Foundation of Democracy in Russia: E. D. Kuskova's Contribution, February–October 1917.” In Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, ed. Edmondson, Linda, 101–23. Cambridge, 1992.Google Scholar
Novikova, Liudmila. “The Russian Revolution from a Provincial Perspective.” Kritika 16, no. 4 (Fall 2015): 769785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “Corporatism or Democracy: The Russian Provisional Government of 1917.”Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 24 (1997): 1526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “The Lower Middle Strata in Revolutionary Russia.” In Between Tsar and People, eds. Kassow, Clowes and West, , 248–68.Google Scholar
Orlovsky, Daniel. “Reform during Revolution: Governing the Provinces in 1917.” In Reform in Russia and the USSR: Past and Prospects, ed. Crummey, Robert O., 100–25. Urbana and Chicago, 1989.Google Scholar
Page, Stanley W. The Formation of the Baltic States: A Study of the Effects of Great Power Politics upon the Emergence of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Cambridge, MA, 1959.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Page, Stanley W.. “Lenin's April Theses and the Latvian Peasant-Soldiery.” In Reconsiderations on the Russian Revolution, ed. Elwood, R. C., 154–72. Cambridge, MA, 1976.Google Scholar
Paleologue, Maurice. An Ambassador's Memoirs. Trans. Holt, F. A.. 3 vols. 2nd edn. London, 1923.Google Scholar
Pares, Bernard. My Russian Memoirs. London, 1931.Google Scholar
Parming, Tonu. “Population and Ethnicity as Intervening Variables in the 1905/1917 Revolutions in the Russian Baltic Provinces.” In Ezergailis and von Pistohlkors, Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 119.Google Scholar
Pearson, Raymond. The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of Tsarism 1914–1917. London, 1977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.The Idea of Siberian Regionalism in Late Imperial and Revolutionary Russia.” Russian History 20, nos. 1–4 (1993): 163–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.. “Regional Consciousness in Siberia Before and After October 1917.” Canadian Slavonic Papers 30, no. 1 (1988): 112–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pereira, N. G. O.. White Siberia: The Politics of Civil War. Montreal, 1996.Google Scholar
Pethybridge, Roger W.Political Repercussions of the Supply Problem in the Russian Revolution of 1917.” Russian Review 29, no. 4 (1970): 379402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pethybridge, Roger W. The Spread of the Russian Revolution: Essays on 1917. London, 1972.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Hugh. “‘A Bad Business’: The February Revolution in Tver.” Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 23, no. 2 (1996): 123–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Hugh. “The Heartland Turns Red: The Bolshevik Seizure of Power in Tver.” Revolutionary Russia 14, no. 1 (2001): 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pipes, Richard. The Formation of the Soviet Union: Communism and Nationalism, 1917–1923. Revised edn. Cambridge, MA, 1964.Google Scholar
Pipes, Richard, ed. Revolutionary Russia. London, 1968.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitcher, Harvey. Witnesses to the Russian Revolution. London, 1994.Google Scholar
Plokhy, Serhii. Unmaking Imperial Russia: Mykhailo Hrushevsky and the Writing of Ukrainian History. Toronto, 2005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, Morgan Phillips. My Reminiscences of the Russian Revolution. London, 1921.Google Scholar
Procyk, Anna. “Russian Liberals and the Nationality Question during the Revolution.” Ukrainian Quarterly 53, no. 4 (1997): 323–34.Google Scholar
Procyk, Anna. “The Russian Provisional Government and Ukraine.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, no. 3–4 (1998): 257–68.Google Scholar
Protasov, L. G.The All-Russian Constituent Assembly and the Democratic Alternative.” Russian Studies in History 33, no. 3 (1994–95): 6693.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinovitch, Simon. Jewish Rights, National Rights: Nationalism and Autonomy in Late Imperial and Revolutionary Russia. Stanford, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. The Bolsheviks Come to Power: The Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New York, 1976.Google Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. The Bolsheviks in Power: The First Year of Soviet Rule in Petrograd. Bloomington, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. “The Evolution of Local Soviets in Petrograd, November 1917–June 1918: The Case of the First City District Soviet.” Slavic Review 46, no. 1 (1987): 2037.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabinowitch, Alexander. Prelude to Revolution: The Petrograd Bolsheviks and the July 1917 Uprising. Bloomington, 1968.Google Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H. The Agrarian Foes of Bolshevism: Promise and Default of the Russian Socialist Revolutionaries, February to October 1917. New York, 1958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H.. The Election to the Russian Constituent Assembly of 1917. Cambridge, MA, 1989.Google Scholar
Radkey, Oliver H.. The Sickle under the Hammer: The Russian Socialist Revolutionaries in the Early Months of Soviet Rule. New York, 1963.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raleigh, Donald J. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca and London, 1986.Google Scholar
Raleigh, Donald J.. “Revolutionary Politics in Provincial Russia: The Tsaritsyn ‘Republic’ in 1917.” Slavic Review 40, no. 2 (1981): 194209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Read, Christopher. From Tsar to Soviets: The Russian People and Their Revolution, 1917–1921. New York, 1996.Google Scholar
Read, Christopher. Lenin: A Revolutionary Life. London, 2005.Google Scholar
Read, Christopher. War and Revolution in Russia, 1914–22. New York, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reed, John. Ten Days That Shook the World. London, 1977 (first published in 1919).Google Scholar
Remington, Thomas F. Building Socialism in Bolshevik Russia: Ideology and Industrial Organization 1917–1921. Pittsburgh, 1984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rendle, Matthew. Defenders of the Motherland: The Tsarist Elite in Revolutionary Russia. Oxford, 2010.Google Scholar
Reshetar, John S. The Ukrainian Revolution, 1917–1920. Princeton, 1952.Google Scholar
Retish, Aaron B.Creating Peasant Citizens: Rituals of Power, Rituals of Citizenship in Viatka Province, 1917.” Revolutionary Russia 16, no. 1 (June 2003): 4767.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Retish, Aaron B.. Russia's Peasants in Revolution and Civil War: Citizenship, Identity, and the Creation of the Soviet State, 1914–1922. Cambridge, 2008.Google Scholar
Rieber, Alfred J. Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Imperial Russia. Chapel Hill, NC, 1982.Google Scholar
Rigby, T. H. Lenin's Government: Sovnarkom 1917–1922. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogger, Hans. Russia in the Age of Modernisation and Revolution 1881–1917. London, 1983.Google Scholar
Roobol, W. H. Tsereteli: A Democrat in the Russian Revolution. A Political Biography. The Hague, 1976.Google Scholar
Rorlich, Azade-Ayse. The Volga Tatars: A Profile in National Resilience. Stanford, CA, 1986.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.The Democratization of Russia's Railroads in 1917.” American Historical Review 86 (1981): 9831008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. Liberals in the Russian Revolution: The Constitutional Democratic Party, 1917–1921. Princeton, 1974.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Problem of Market Relations and the State in Revolutionary Russia.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 36 (1994): 356–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Russian Labor and Bolshevik Power after October.” Slavic Review 44, no. 2 (1985): 205–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Russian Municipal Duma Elections of 1971: A Preliminary Computation of Returns.” Soviet Studies 21, no. 2 (1969–70): 131–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Social Mediation and State Construction(s) in Revolutionary Russia.” Social History 19, no. 2 (1994): 169–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “Workers and Workers’ Control in the Russian Revolution.” History Workshop 5 (1978): 8997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, William G.. “The Zemstvo in 1917 and Its Fate under Bolshevik Rule.” In The Zemstvo in Russia: An Experiment in Local Self-Government, ed. Vucinich, Wayne S., 383422. Cambridge, 1982.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, William G. and Koenker, Diane. “The Limits of Formal Protest: Workers’ Activism and Social Polarization in Petrograd and Moscow, March to October, 1917.” American Historical Review 2 (1987): 296326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, Edward Alsworth. Russia in Upheaval. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Ross, Edward Alsworth. The Russian Bolshevik Revolution. New York, 1921.Google Scholar
Rowley, Alison. Open Letter: Russian Popular Culture and the Picture Postcard, 1880–1922. Toronto, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rupp, Sue Zayer. The Struggle in the East: Opposition Politics in Siberia, 1918. The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and East European Studies 1304. Pittsburgh, 1998.Google Scholar
Russian Culture in War and Revolution, 1914–22. Book 1: Popular Culture, the Arts and Illutrations. Book 2: Popular Culture, Identities, Mentalities, and Memory. Frame, Murray, Kolonitskii, Boris, Marks, Steven G., and Stockdale, Melissa K., eds. Bloomington, IN, 2014.Google Scholar
Russia's Failed Democratic Revolution, February-October 1917: A Centennial Reappraisal. Special issue of the Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography, Lyandres, Semion ed. (vol. 9, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russia's Home Front in War and Revolution, 1914–22. Book 1, Russia's Revolution in Regional Perspective, Badcock, Sarah, Novikova, Liudmila G., and Retish, Aaron B., eds.; Book 2: The Experience of War and Revolution, Lindenmeyr, Adele, Read, Christopher, and Waldron, Peter, eds., Bloomington, IN., 2015, 2016.Google Scholar
Ruthchild, Rochelle Goldberg. Equality and Revolution: Women's Rights in the Russian Empire, 1905–1917. Pittsburg, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sack, A. J. The Birth of Russian Democracy. New York, 1918.Google Scholar
Sahadeo, Jeff. Russian Colonial Society in Tashkent, 1865–1923. Bloomington, IN, 2007.Google Scholar
Sanborn, Joshua A. Drafting the Russian Nation: Military Conscription, Total War, and Mass Politics, 1905–1925. DeKalb, 2003.Google Scholar
Sanders, Jonathan. Russia 1917: The Unpublished Revolution. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Sargeant, Elena. “Reappraisal of the Russian Revolution in Contemporary Russian Historiography.” Revolutionary Russia 10, no. 1 (1997): 3554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saul, Norman E. Sailors in Revolt: The Russian Baltic Fleet in 1917. Lawrence, KS, 1978.Google Scholar
Selunskaia, N. B.Levels of Technology and the Use of Hired Labor in the Peasant and Manorial Economy of European Russia in 1917.” Russian Review 47, no. 4 (1988): 409–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Service, Robert. The Bolshevik Party in Revolution: A Study in Organisational Change, 1917–1923. London, 1979.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Service, Robert. Lenin: A Biography. London, 2000.Google Scholar
Service, Robert. Lenin: A Political Life. 3 vols. London, 1985–94.Google Scholar
Service, Robert. The Russian Revolution 1900–1929. 4th edn. Basingstoke and London, 2009.Google Scholar
Service, Robert, ed. Society and Politics in the Russian Revolution. Basingstoke and London, 1992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shkliarevsky, Gennady. Labor in the Russian Revolution: Factory Committees and Trade Unions, 1917–1918. New York, 1993.Google Scholar
Shklovsky, Viktor. A Sentimental Journey: Memoirs, 1917–1921. Trans. Sheldon, Richard. Ithaca and London, 1984.Google Scholar
Shlapentokh, Dmitry. The Counter-Revolution in Revolution: Images of Thermidor and Napoleon at the Time of the Russian Revolution and Civil War. New York, 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shukman, Harold, ed. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Russian Revolution. Oxford, 1988.Google Scholar
Shulgin, V. V. Days of the Russian Revolution: Memoirs from the Right, 1905–1917. Trans. Adams, B. F.. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1990.Google Scholar
Siegelbaum, Lewis. The Politics of Industrial Mobilization in Russia, 1914–1917. London and New York, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slusser, Robert H. Stalin in October: The Man Who Missed the Revolution. Baltimore and London, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smele, Jonathan D. The Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917–1921: An Annotated Bibliography. London and New York, 2003.Google Scholar
Smele, Jonathan D.. The “Russian” Civil Wars, 1916–1926: Ten Years That Shook the World. London, 2015.Google Scholar
Smith, Nathan. “The Role of Russian Freemasonry in the February Revolution: Another Scrap of Evidence.” Slavic Review 27, no. 4 (1968): 604–08.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.Craft Consciousness, Class Consciousness: Petrograd 1917.” History Workshop 11 (1981): 3358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. Red Petrograd: Revolution in the Factories, 1917–1918. Cambridge, 1983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. “Writing the History of the Russian Revolution after the Fall of Communism.” Europe-Asia Studies 46 (1994): 563–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, S. A.. “Moral Economy and Peasant Revolution in Russia, 1861–1918.” Revolutionary Russia 24, no. 2 (2011): 143171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snow, Russell E. The Bolsheviks in Siberia, 1917–March 1918. Rutherford, NJ, 1975.Google Scholar
Spence, Richard. Boris Savinkov, Renegade on the Left. Boulder, CO, 1991.Google Scholar
Startsev, V. I.Lenin in October of 1917.” Soviet Studies in History 27, no. 2 (1988–89): 86113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Startsev, V. I.. “The Question of Power in the October Days of 1917.” Soviet Studies in History 27, no. 2 (1988–89): 3655.Google Scholar
Steinberg, Mark D. The Fall of the Romanovs: Political Dreams and Personal Struggles in a Time of Revolution. New Haven, 1995.Google Scholar
Steinberg, Mark D.. Voices of Revolution, 1917. New Haven, 2001.Google Scholar
Stites, Richard. Revolutionary Dreams: Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. New York and Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
Stites, Richard. The Women's Liberation Movement in Russia: Feminism, Nihilism, and Bolshevism, 1860–1930. Princeton, 1978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockdale, Melissa Kirschke. Paul Miliukov and the Quest for a Liberal Russia, 1880–1918. Ithaca, 1996.Google Scholar
Stockdale, Melissa Kirschke. “‘My Death for the Motherland Is Happiness’: Women, Patriotism, and Soldiering in Russia's Great War, 1914–1917.” American Historical Review 109, no. 1 (February 2004): 78116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoff, Laurie. They Fought for the Motherland: Russia's Women Soldiers in World War I and the Revolution. Lawrence, KS, 2006.Google Scholar
Stojko, Wolodymyr. “The Ukrainian Central Rada and the Bolsheviks.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, nos. 3–4 (1998): 269–81.Google Scholar
Stone, Bailey. The Anatomy of Revolution Revisited: A Comparative Analysis of England, France, and Russia. Cambridge, 2014.Google Scholar
Stone, David R. The Russian Army in the Great War: The Eastern Front, 1914–1917. Lawrence, KS, 2015.Google Scholar
Stone, Norman. The Eastern Front 1914–1917. London, 1975.Google Scholar
Struve, P. B. Food Supply in Russia during the World War. New Haven, 1930.Google Scholar
Sukhanov, N. N. The Russian Revolution 1917: A Personal Record. 2 vols. Trans. Carmichael, J.. London, 1955.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Baku Commune, 1917–1918: Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution. Princeton, 1972.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Nationalism and Social Class in the Russian Revolution: The Cases of Baku and Tiflis.” In Transcaucasia. Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, ed. Suny, , 241–60. 2nd edn. Ann Arbor, MI, 1996.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Nationality and Class in the Russian Revolutions of 1917 : A Reexamination of Social Categories.” In Stalinism: Its Nature and Aftermath: Essays in Honor of Moshe Lenin, ed. Lampert, Nick and Rittersporn, Gabor, 211–41. Armonk, NY, 1992.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Revenge of the Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union. Stanford, CA, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Revision and Retreat in the Historiography of 1917: Social History and Its Critics.” Russian Review 53 (1994): 155–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suny, Ronald Grigor. “Toward a Social History of the October Revolution.” American Historical Review 88 (1983): 3152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. “Before the Fighting Started: A Discussion on the Theme of ‘The Third Way.”’ Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 2 (December 1991): 210–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. The Origins of the Russian Civil War. London, 1996.Google Scholar
Swain, Geoffrey. Trotsky and the Russian Revolution. London, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swietochowski, Tadeusz. Russian Azerbaijan, 1905–1920. Cambridge, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “Memoirs of the Russian Provisional Government,” Revolutionary Russia 27, no. 1 (June 2014): 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “The St. Petersburg/Petrograd Mezhraionka, 1913–1917; The Rise and Fall of a Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party Unity Faction.” Slavonic and East European Review 87, no. 2 (April 2009), 284321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. “Scripting the Russian Revolution,” in Scripting Revolution, ed. Baker, Keith Michael and Edelstein, Dan, Stanford, 2015, 213227, 399402.Google Scholar
Thatcher, Ian. Trotsky. London, 2003.Google Scholar
Thompson, John H. Revolutionary Russia, 1917. 2nd edn. New York, 1989.Google Scholar
Tirado, Isabela A. Young Guard: The Communist Youth League, Petrograd 1917–1920. Westport, CT, New York and London, 1988.Google Scholar
Tribunskii, Pavel A.The Riazan Zemstvo in the February Revolution.” Russian Studies in History 38, no. 2 (Fall, 1999): 4865.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trotsky, L. D. History of the Russian Revolution. 3 vols. New York, 1932.Google Scholar
Tseretelli [Tsereteli], I.Reminiscences of the February Revolution: The April Crisis.” Russian Review 14 (1955): 93108, 184200, 301–21; 15 (1956): 37–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyrkova-Williams, Ariadna. From Liberty to Brest-Litovsk. London, 1919; reprint, Westport, CT, 1977.Google Scholar
Ulam, Adam. The Bolsheviks. New York, 1965.Google Scholar
Uldricks, Teddy J.The Crowd in the Russian Revolution: Towards Reassessing the Nature of Revolutionary Leadership.” Politics and Society 4, no. 3 (1974): 397413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Upton, Anthony F. The Finnish Revolution 1917–1918. Minneapolis, 1980.Google Scholar
Varneck, E.Siberian Native Peoples After the February Revolution.” Slavonic and East European Review 21 (1942–44): 7088.Google Scholar
Velychenko, Stephen. State Building in Revolutionary Ukraine: A Comparative Study of Governments and Bureaucrats, 1917–1922. Toronto, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vernadsky, George, ed. A Source Book for Russian History from Early Times to 1917. Vol. 3. New Haven, 1972.Google Scholar
Verstiuk, Vladyslav. “Conceptual Issues in Studying the History of the Ukrainian Revolution.” Journal of Ukrainian Studies 24, no. 1 (1999): 520.Google Scholar
Volobuev, P. V.The Mensheviks in the Fall of 1917: Decisions and Consequences.” In The Bolsheviks in Russian Society, ed. Brovkin, Vladimir, 4358. New Haven, 1997.Google Scholar
Von Hagen, Mark. Soldiers in the Proletarian Dictatorship: The Red Army and the Soviet Socialist State, 1917–1930. Ithaca and London, 1990.Google Scholar
Von Hagen, Mark. “The Russian Imperial Army and the Ukrainian National Movement in 1917.” Ukrainian Quarterly 54, no. 3–4 (1998): 220–56.Google Scholar
Von Laue, Theodore. “Westernization, Revolution and the Search for a Basis of Authority: Russia in 1917.” Soviet Studies 19, no. 2 (October 1967): 156–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Von Laue, Theodore. Why Lenin? Why Stalin? A Reappraisal of the Russian Revolution, 1900–1930. Philadelphia, 1964 and later edns.Google Scholar
Wada, Haruki. “The Russian February Revolution of 1917.” Annals of the Institute of Social Science, no. 15 (1974): 72–94.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Argonauts of Peace: The Soviet Delegation to Western Europe in the Summer of 1917.” Slavic Review 26, no. 3 (1967): 453–67.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Documents of Soviet History, vol. 1, The Triumph of Bolshevism, 1917–1919. Gulf Breeze, FL, 1991.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Irakli Tsereteli and Siberian Zimmerwaldism.” Journal of Modern History 39, no. 4 (December 1967): 425–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Rajonnye Sovety of Petrograd: The Role of Local Political Bodies in the Russian Revolution.” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 20 (1972): 226–40.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Red Guards and Workers’ Militias in the Russian Revolution. Stanford, CA, 1984.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Revolution at One Hundred: Issues and Trends in the English Language Historiography of the Russian Revolution.” Journal of Modern Russian History and Historiography 9 (2016): 938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “The Revolution in the Provinces: Khar'kov and the Varieties of Response to the October Revolution.” Revolutionary Russia 4, no. 1 (1991): 132–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. Revolutionary Russia; New Approaches. New York and London, 2004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wade, Rex A. The Russian Search for Peace, February–October 1917. Stanford, 1969.Google Scholar
Wade, Rex A. “Ukrainian Nationalism and Soviet Power: Kharkiv, 1917.” In Ukrainian Past, Ukrainian Present, ed. Krawchenko, Bohdan, 7083. New York, 1993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warth, Robert A. The Allies and the Russian Revolution: From the Fall of the Monarchy to the Peace of Brest-Litovsk. Durham, NC, 1954.Google Scholar
Warth, Robert A.. Nicholas II: The Life and Reign of Russia's Last Monarch. Westport, CT, 1997.Google Scholar
White, Howard. “Civil Rights and the Provisional Government.” In Civil Rights in Imperial Russia, ed. Edmondson, Olga Crispand Linda, 287312. Oxford, 1989.Google Scholar
White, Howard. “1917 in the Rear Garrisons.” In Economy and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, 1860–1930, ed. Edmondson, L. and Waldron, P., 152–68. Basingstoke and London, 1992.Google Scholar
White, James D.The February Revolution and the Bolshevik Vyborg District Committee (in Response to Michael Melancon).” Soviet Studies 41, no. 4 (1989): 603–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. “The Kornilov Affair: A Study in Counter Revolution.” Soviet Studies 20, no. 2 (1968–69): 187205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. Lenin: The Practice and Theory of Revolution. London, 2001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, James D.. “Lenin, Trotskii and the Arts of Insurrection: The Congress of Soviets of the Northern Region, 11–13 October 1917.” Slavonic and East European Review 77, no. 1 (January 1999): 117–39.Google Scholar
White, James D.. The Russian Revolution, 1917–1921: A Short History. New York, 1994.Google Scholar
White, James D.. “The Sormovo-Nikolaev Zemlyachestvo in the February Revolution.” Soviet Studies 31, no. 4 (1979): 475504.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wildman, Allan K. The End of the Russian Imperial Army: The Old Army and the Soldiers’ Revolt (March–April 1917). Princeton, 1980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wildman, Allan K.. The End of the Russian Imperial Army: The Road to Soviet Power and Peace. Princeton, 1987.Google Scholar
Williams, Albert Rhys. Journey into Revolution: Petrograd, 1917–1918. Chicago, 1969.Google Scholar
Williams, Beryl. The Russian Revolution 1917–1921. Oxford, 1987.Google Scholar
Yekelchyk, Serhy. Ukraine: Birth of a Modern Nation. Oxford, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zeman, Z. A. B., ed. Germany and the Revolution in Russia, 1915–1918: Documents from the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry. London, 1958.Google Scholar
Zemelis, Sigurds. “Latvia on the Way to October.” In Ezergailis and von Pistohlkors, Die baltischen Provinzen Russlands, 257–64.Google Scholar
Zenkovsky, Sergei A. Pan-Turkism and Islam in Russia. Cambridge, MA, 1960.Google Scholar
Znamenskii, O. N.The Petrograd Intelligentsia during the February RevolutionSoviet Studies in History 23, no. 1 (1984–85): 3955.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zohrab, I.The Socialist Revolutionary Party, Kerensky and the Kornilov Affair: From the Unpublished Papers of Harold W. Williams.” New Zealand Slavonic Journal (1991): 131–61.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Further reading
  • Rex A. Wade, George Mason University, Virginia
  • Book: The Russian Revolution, 1917
  • Online publication: 02 February 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316417898.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Further reading
  • Rex A. Wade, George Mason University, Virginia
  • Book: The Russian Revolution, 1917
  • Online publication: 02 February 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316417898.014
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Further reading
  • Rex A. Wade, George Mason University, Virginia
  • Book: The Russian Revolution, 1917
  • Online publication: 02 February 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316417898.014
Available formats
×