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The Commune State in Moscow in 1918
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
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The first months of Soviet power raise important questions about the ideology of the transition to socialism and about the nature of Bolshevik power. The destruction of the old state apparatus was accompanied by vigorous institution building; the “red guard attack against capital” was balanced by the emergence of potentially powerful Soviet economic apparatus. The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk signed in March 1918 was followed by a period of state capitalism in which a strong socialist state was to supervise elements of capitalism in the economy. All stages were accompanied by vigorous debate within the party and, from March 1918, by the political alienation of a section of the working class. By the onset of full-scale civil war and the transition to war communism in late spring 1918 the Bolshevik party and the institutions of the new Soviet state dominated the political life of the country. Was there something in Marxist ideology that, when interpreted by Lenin and the Bolsheviks, encouraged centralized and dirigiste forms of government regardless of actual conditions? A large body of literature now exists that examines this issue from various perspectives. This literature has recently been enriched by a number of studies that look at events from the perspective of lower-level participants and area case studies.
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References
An earlier version of this paper was presented to the Essex Conference on the Early Months of Bolshevik Rule (University of Essex, May 1984). I would like to thank Steve Smith and Howard White for their helpful comments.
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In this article all dates up to and including 31 January 1918 are according to the Old Stylecalendar. Following a jump of thirteen days all dates from 14 February are New Style.
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33. Marc Ferro argues that the process had already begun in 1917; see “The Birth of the Soviet Bureaucratic System” in Reconsiderations on the Russian Revolutions, ed. R. Carter Elwood (Cambridge, Mass.: Slavica, 1976), pp. 113–120. Compare Roi Medvedev, On Socialist Democracy (London: Spokesman, 1975), 140–141.
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41. Kommunisticheskii trud, 5 May 1920. Some of the numerical increase was perhaps due to theinclusion of categories, such as teachers and nurses, previously not counted as local administrative workers, but the upward trend at a time of falling population is clear.
42. Chugaev, D. A., ed., Rabochii klass Sovetskoi Rossti vpervyi goddiktatury proletariate!: sbornik dokumentov i materialov (Mosow, 1965)Google Scholar, doc. no. 52.
43. Kommunar, 18 October 1918.
44. A survey of the 460 employees of Moscow Oblast Council of the Economy found that out of 383 technical personnel, 180 had previously worked for bourgeois economic bodies. Only 7 (1.8 percent) were Communists, and of the whole 460 only 25 (5.4 percent) were Communists. All 77 ofthe council's leading workers had earlier worked in various soviet organizations and in the workers’ groups of bourgeois organs, and 18 (23.4 percent) of them were party members; Drobizhev, V. Z., “Obrazovanie sovetov narodnogo khoziaistva v Moskovskom promyshlennom raione (1917–1918gg.),” in Iz istorii velikoi oktiabr'skoi sotsialisticheskoi revoliutsii (Moscow, 1957), pp. 107–108 Google Scholar.
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61. These are the figures for 46 out of 54 unions in the Moscow Trade Union Council. Of the other 101 members, 70 were Bolsheviks, 9 in other parties, and 22 nonparty, Izvestiia Moskovskogo sovela rabochikh i soldatskikh deputatov 17 (24 January 1918).
62. Ronnie Kowalski has concluded that after the Brest peace the Left Communists quickly lostthe support of workers and lower-level officials in Moscow for their revolutionary war and economicprograms, “The Left Communist Movement in 1918: A Preliminary Analysis of its Regional Strength,” Study Group on the Russian Revolution, Sbornik 12 (1986): 32–39.
63. Pechatnik 3–4 (4 April 1918): 4; 7–8 (28 July 1918): 8.
64. Krasnaia Presnia, pp. 460, 465.
65. Ignat'ev, Moskva v pervyi, p. 159.
66. Bershtam, M. S., Issledovaniia noveishei russkoi istorii, vol. 2, Nezavisimoe rabochee dvizhenie v 1916 godu: dokumenty i materialy (Paris: YMCA, 1981), pp. 145–146.Google Scholar
67. Lenin, PSS 50: 90.
68. Ibid., 37: 90–91. Even at this conference twenty-three out of fifty-five delegates were Mensheviks;Pechatnik 7–8 (28 July 1918): 8.
69. Mandel, Petrograd Workers and the Soviet Seizure of Power, analyzes working-class support for the Bolsheviks in 1917 in terms of the rationale of class circumstances.
70. For example, the Moscow oblast committee of the metalworkers’ union in early summer 1918 when commenting about disturbances in some metal plants; TsGAOR 7952/3/212/199.
71. Diane Koenker, “The Evolution of Party Consciousness in 1917: The Case of the MoscowWorkers,” Soviet Studies 30 (January 1978): 38–62. Smith, Red Petrograd, demonstrates that revolutionaryconsciousness emerged out of struggles within factories rather than solely from the actions of the parties themselves.
72. Rosenberg, “Russian Labor and Bolshevik Power,” p. 218.
73. Harding, Lenin's Political Thought 2: 177.
74. Perepiska sekretariata TsK RKP (b) s mestnymi partiinymi organizatsiiami 7 (Moscow, 1972), p. 438, note 1; Chugaev, ed., Rabochii klass, p. 76.
75. Pravda, 31 August 1918, 4 April 1918, 7 July 1918.
76. Voprosy istorii KPSS 6 (1971): 86.
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78. Pravda, 5 January 1919, 27 July 1918.
79. Perepiska 3 (Moscow, 1957): 121.
80. Harding, Lenin's Political Thought 2: 196.
81. Perepiska 2 (Moscow, 1957): 171.
82. VII ekslrennyi s “ezd RKP (b), mart 1918 goda: stenograficheskii otchet (Moscow, 1962), pp.171–172.
83. Savel'ev, Vpervi, pp. 110, 124.
84. Liebman, Marcel, Leninism under Lenin, trans. Pearce, Brian (London: Merlin, 1980, p. 308 Google Scholar, states that the first reregistrations were held in 1919; Baganov, I. I., Moskovskie bol'sheviki v ogne revoliutsionnykh boev (Moscow, 1976), p. 143 Google Scholar; Chugaev, ed., Rabochii Mass, p. 96.
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89. Kommunist 4 (June 1918): 15.
90. The 28 May city party conference as quoted in Varlamov and Slamikhin, Razoblachenie, p. 372.
91. Perepiska 3: 73; Piatnitskii is quoted in Varlamov and Slamikhin, Razoblachenie, p. 378.
92. Perepiska 3: 73.
93. Skocpol, Theda, States and Social Revolutions (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1979), p. 206 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
94. Raleigh, Revolution on the Volga, p. 322.
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