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On Matters Evidential: A Reply

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Robert C. Tucker*
Affiliation:
Council on International and Regional Studies at Princeton University

Abstract

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Type
Discussion
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 1977

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References

1. A scholar who not long ago emigrated from Soviet Russia, Dr. Mikhail Agursky, has unearthed further evidence that Dzhugashvili gravitated at an early age toward a Russian nationalist outlook. See his article, “Dvulikii Stalin,” Vremia i my, no. 18 (June 1977), especially pp. 133-35.

2. “Stalin, Bukharin, and History as Conspiracy” has been reprinted in Tucker, Robert C., The Soviet Political Mind: Stalinism and Post-Stalin Change, 2nd ed. (New York, 1971)Google Scholar, where the statement quoted here appears on page 74.

3. Gnedin, E., Iz istorii otnoshenii mezhdu SSSR i fashistskoi Germaniei: Dokumenty i sovremennye kommentarii (New York: Khronika Press, 1977, p. 13 Google Scholar. Mr. Gnedin, who headed the Narkomindel's press section and was personally friendly with Litvinov, was arrested shortly after Litvinov's dismissal in 1939 and spent many years in camps and exile. He now resides in Moscow.