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Philip Pomper. Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin. The Intelligentsia and Power.

Philip Pomper. Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin. The Intelligentsia and Power.

Nueva York: Columbia University Press, 1990.

460 páginas.

Contents

Preface

1 – The Ul’ianovs

2 – Alexander Ul’ianov, Terrorist

3 – Vladimir Ul’ianov, Substitute Revolutionary

4 – Moratorium and Apprenticeship

5 – Exile and Emigration

6 – Lenin and Plekhanov

7 – The Emergence of Leninism

8 – 1905

9 – The Bronsteins

10 – The Impostor

11 – Lev Bronstein’s Two Conversions

12 – Leon Trotsky, Romantic Exile

13 – Trotsky Against Lenin

14 – Trotsky in 1905

15 – Lenin at Loose Ends

16 – losif Dzhugashvili Becomes Koba

17 – Koba: From Apprentice to Journeyman

18 – The Travails of Russian Social Democracy

19 – Philosophical Interlude

20 – The Death and Rebirth of Bolshevism

21 – Lenin in Isolation

22 – Lenin, Trotsky, and World War I

23 – 1917: The Return of the Exiles

24 – Trotsky and the Bolsheviks

25 – Lenin’s First Bid for Power

26 – The Bolsheviks in Extremis

27 – Lenin’s Utopia

28 – Reversal: On the Attack

29 – October 1917

30 – The Travails of Power

31 – Crisis: Brest-Litovsk

32 – The Civil War: Trotsky Versus Stalin

33 – War Communism

34 – Lenin Against Trotsky

35 – 1921: Year of Crisis and Retreat

36 – Lenin’s Last Campaigns

37 – The “Testament”

38 – Trotsky’s “New Course”

39 – Lenin’s Death and Trotsky’s Decline