Alexander Shlyapnikov, 1885-1937: Life Of An Old Bolshevik

Historical Materialism, Volume 90

Barbara C Allen author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Haymarket Books

Published:30th Jun '16

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Alexander Shlyapnikov, 1885-1937: Life Of An Old Bolshevik cover

Features in Historical Materialism Promotion targeting left academic journals Published to coincide with the annual Historical Materialism conference Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements

The first biography—in any language—of Alexander Shlyapnikov, a leader and founder, along with Kollontai, of the Workers’ Opposition.This volume recounts the political formation and positions of Russian trade unionist and 'old Bolshevik' Alexander Shlyapnikov. Famous for his role in the Workers' Opposition, and his calls for trade unions to realize workers' mastery over the economy, this biography - the first in any language - offers a little seen 'on the shop floor' view of life within the Russian revolutionary movement.

"Drawing on a vast body of previously untapped archival sources, including top secret FSB files, Barbara Allen presents a nuanced, insightful, and compelling portrait of the leading worker-Bolshevik, Alexander Shlyapnikov, and of the time in which he lived. Her highly readable study is vital for all those seriously interested in the Russian revolution and the fate of the Russian labor movement under Lenin and Stalin." —Alexander Rabinowitch, The Bolsheviks Come to Power "This biography of a Bolshevik worker-intellectual provides a vivid alternative to the common focus on the party's best-known leaders, and insight into Bolshevik political culture, internal debates and all." —China Miéville, October "Barbara Allen has given us a fascinating perspective on the Russian Revolution, showing its strengths and weaknesses through the remarkable but ultimately tragic story of a Bolshevik worker-intellectual...Allen deserves our gratitude for telling the story of an honest and clear-sighted revolutionary who pursued his own course through the revolution with courage and integrity." —Ian Birchall, Revolutionary Socialism For the 21st Century. "The biography is an exemplary study of the rise and fall of a group of people commonly subsumed under the term "Old Bolsheviks". ... Shlyapnikov's life journey possesses illustrative and explanatory potential and it can contribute to a better understanding of historical processes and phenomena which go beyond the individual…While endeavouring to understand Shlyapnikov, Allen constantly retains the required critical distance towards her protagonist.…Barbara Allen has applied the biographical approach in exemplary fashion. Her book, which reads well throughout, should serve as encouragement to historians of Eastern Europe to pay more attention to the biographical form" —Andreas Oberender, H-Soz-u-Kult (translated by Ben Lewis). "Drawing on material from seven archives, five in Russia and two in the United States, as well as extensive conversations with the Shlyapnikov family, Barbara Allen has provided the definitive biography of Alexander Shlyapnikov and made a lasting contribution to Soviet history in its first two decades" —Alexis E. Pogorelskin, Canadian Slavonic Papers "This superb biography of the Old Bolshevik Alexander Shlyapnikov is a thoroughly researched, engaging study of the extraordinary Russian worker whose political life was torn between his commitment to Bolshevik discipline and the ideal of workers' management of industry…In addition to the stenographic record of Party and trade-union congresses and conferences, Allen gained access to an impressive array of Party and state archival materials, including those of the political police, supplemented by Shlyapnikov's correspondence and prison memoir of his childhood, and conversations with surviving members of his family, who also provided many photos." —Charters Wynn, Canadian-American Slavic Studies "In her rich biography of Alexander Shliapnikov, Barbara C. Allen makes excellent use of her rare access to typically closed files of the FSB archives as well as Shliapnikov's remarkable personal correspondence. What emerges is a valuable and detailed picture not only of the individual but also the world he inhabited: from his early years in a community of Old Believers; to the revolutionary struggles with, and then among, his comrades; his arrests and interrogations, through which he consistently argues his innocence; and finally his execution in Moscow in September 1937." —Tracy McDonald in A Companion to the Russian Revolution, edited by Daniel Orlovsky, John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2020.

ISBN: 9781608465583

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 610g

426 pages