ABSTRACT

Supporters of Stalin saw Trotsky as a traitor and renegade. Trotsky’s own supporters saw him as the only true Leninist. In Trotsky and the Russian Revolution, Geoffrey Swain restores Trotsky to his real and central role in the Russian Revolution. In this succinct and comprehensive study, Swain contests that:

  • In the years between 1903 and 1917, it was the ideas of Trotsky, rather than Lenin, which shaped the nascent Bolshevik Party and prepared it for the overthrow of the Tsar.
  • During the autumn of 1917 workers supported Trotsky’s idea of an insurrection carried out by the soviet, rather than Lenin’s demand for a party orchestrated coup d’etat.
  • During the Russian Civil War, Trotsky persuaded a sceptical Lenin that the only way to victory was through the employment of officers trained in the Tsar’s army.

As well as examining Trotsky’s critique of Stalin’s Russia in the 1930s, this seminar reader probes deeper to explore the ideas which drove Trotsky forward during his years of influence over Russia’s revolutionary politics, exploring such key concepts as how to construct a revolutionary party, how to stage a successful insurrection, how to fight a revolutionary war, and how to build a socialist state.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

Developing a World View

chapter 3|20 pages

Living the Revolution

chapter 4|20 pages

Defending the Revolution

chapter 5|25 pages

Building a Workers’ Economy

chapter 6|18 pages

Combating Thermidor

chapter 7|4 pages

Conclusion

part |1 pages

Documents

chapter 1|1 pages

Report of the Siberian Delegation (1903)

chapter 2|2 pages

Our Political Tasks (1904)

chapter 3|3 pages

Results and Prospects (1906)

chapter 4|1 pages

Pravda no. 2 (17–30 December 1908)

chapter 11|1 pages

Trotsky to Lenin (13 August 1918)

chapter 14|1 pages

Trotsky to Lenin (13 October 1918)

chapter 18|2 pages

Criminal Demagogy (17 July 1919)

chapter 28|1 pages

My Life (1930)

chapter 29|2 pages

Declaration of the Thirteen (14 July 1926)