The Red Flag: A History of Communism

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The Red Flag: A History of Communism Page 90

by Priestland, David


  Angelina, Pasha, 163–4, 284

  Angola, 473, 479–80, 530

  anti-Semitism in the USSR, 282–3, 289

  apparatchiki, emergence of, 166–7

  Arbenz, Jacobo, 370, 371–2

  architecture

  modernity in the USSR, 343–5

  Pioneer Palace, 315–16

  Stalinist in Beijing, 351

  tall buildings of the Stalinist regime, 273–5

  tribunes and squares of the USSR, 275

  army (French) under the Jacobins, 10–12

  Arp, Hans, 104–5

  artisans, 33–4

  Arzhilovskii, Andrei, 172

  Asia

  capitalism in, 562

  difficulties embedding Marxism, 243–4

  Indonesia, 271

  Malaysia, 271–2

  nationalist movements, 237

  North Korea, 267–9

  Philippines, 271

  Stalin’s approach towards, 232–3

  USSR’s approach towards, 238–9

  atheism in the USSR, 345

  Baader–Meinhof Gang, 465

  Babel, Isaak, 88–9

  Babeuf, François-Noel, 8–9, 18–19

  Baibakov, Nikolai, 526

  Baku Comintern congress, 237

  Bakunin, Mikhail, 41–2, 69–70

  Bandung conference, 373–5

  Bay of Pigs invasion, Cuba, 384–6

  Bebel, August, 52

  Beijing’s Ten Great Buildings, 351

  Bely, Andrei, 80–81

  Beria, Lavrentii, 323–4

  Berkeley University, 455–6

  Berlin Wall, breaching of, xv, 544–5

  Berlinguer, Enrico, 496–7

  Berman, Jakub, 214, 225, 288, 290, 291

  Bernstein, Eduard, 55–7

  Bhattacharya, Narendra Nath, 237–8

  Bizot, François, 487–8, 492

  black markets, 446–7, 448

  Black Power, 460

  Blonde Round the Corner, The, 446

  Bloody Sunday (Russia), 78

  Bolsheviks

  control over national parties, 124–7

  discipline and support welcomed by national parties, 127–8

  emergence of pure Communist parties under, 122–3

  move from radical to modernist Marxism, 62–3

  progress of after First World War, 107–8

  seizure of power by, 87–8

  Stalin joins, 137

  wartime methods to control economy, 95–6

  Bolshevism, appeal of for China, 242

  Bosnian war, 551–2

  Brecht, Bertolt, 103–4, 120–21, 570–71

  Brezhnev, Leonid

  attitude to Stalin, 430

  background, 420

  character, 420–21

  cult of Malaia Zemlia, 430

  economic reforms, 421

  ideological flexibility, 421

  jokes about, 419

  love of hierarchy, 431

  meeting with Nixon 1972, 450

  stability of cadres principle, 431

  Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT), 450

  Bronze Horseman, 61–2, 80–81

  Bukharin, Nikolai, 142

  Bulgaria, 213, 217, 545

  Buonarroti, Filippo, 19

  Burawoy, Michael, 416–17, 438–9, 443–4

  Burlatskii, Fedor, 322

  Cabet, Étenne, 21

  Cabral, Amílcar, 469

  Caetano, Marcelo, 475

  Calvert, Gregory, 458–9

  Cambodia, 488–95

  capital

  allocation of as problem, 417–18

  shortage of, impact of, 523–7

  Capital (Marx), 38–9, 72

  Captive Mind, The (Miosz), 286–7

  Carmichael, Stokely, 460

  Carnation Revolution, Portugal, 475–6

  Carnot, Lazare Nicholas, 10

  cars, provision of, 416

  Case of the Illiterate Saboteur, The (Tuma), 480–81

  Castro, Fidel

  assassination attempts on, 386

  background, 381

  on Che Guevara, 381

  turns against Soviets, 386, 389

  Catholic Church

  in Italy, 294

  and Marxism in Latin America, 468

  Poland, 518–19

  see also religion

  Ceauşescu, Nicolae, 546

  alliance with Czech reformers, 403

  background, 403

  cult of, 407

  ethnic nationalism, 407–8

  as Romanian premier, 406–7

  Cement (Gladkov), 140–42

  Central America, 530

  Charter 77, 449

  Cheka, Russian secret police, 95

  Chen Duxiu, 235, 241, 247, 248

  Chernyshevskii, Nikolai, 66–9, 71, 75

  Chiang Kaishek

  change in attitude towards USSR, 247

  Northern Expedition, 248

  Chile, 474–5

  Chmieliński, Edmund, 304–5

  China

  appeal of Bolshevism for, 242, 245

  Beijing’s Ten Great Buildings, 351

  break with USSR, 356–7

  campaigns against Japan, 255–6

  categorization of population, 345

  changes since early 1970s, 502–3

  cinema in, 300–301

  class discrimination, 357–8

  class struggle, 299

  collapse of empire, 240–41

  collectivization in, 309–11

  colonization of, 240

  Comintern impose control, 255

  compared to Korea, 302–3

  Confucianism in, 239–40, 562

  controlled liberalization attempt, 352–3

  Cultural Revolution, 358–69, 504

  and the destruction of Indonesian party, 400

  difficulties embedding Marxism, 244–5

  dress reform campaign, 301–2

  economic success of, 561

  fashion in, 301–2

  Gorbachev’s visit 1989, 553–4

  Great Leap Forward, 353–7

  greatest heroes named in 2002, 556–7

  guerrilla ‘people’s war’, 253–4

  Guomindang, 247–8, 265–6

  impact of Versailles agreement, 241

  industrial labour force, 308

  inequalities in, 563

  influence on Third World Communists, 376

  investments made on political grounds, 563

  January Storm, 366

  Japanese invasion 1937, 261–2

  Jiangxi Soviet Republic, 253

  and the Korean War, 298

  land reform, 262–3, 298

  Long March, 255

  market reforms, 504–8

  May 4th movement, 241

  May 30th movement, 248

  and nationalism, 247–8

  New Culture movement, 241

  New Democracy era, 297–8

  under new liberal trade regime, 523

  operas, revolutionary, 361

  opposition to Bolshevik-style party, 246

  paternalism of state, 436

  peasantry as difficult to mobilize, 263

  ‘People or Monsters’ reportage piece, 503–4

  power of managers, 439

  rectification as purge, 259–61

  relations with USSR, 296–7

  Soviet aid to, 352

  technocratic Marxism in, 507, 562

  tensions with Moscow, 245

  Tian’anmen Square protests and massacre, 553–5

  University of the Toilers of the East, Moscow, 246–7

  unpopular piece rate and wage systems, 308

  USSR as model, 300–302

  versions of Communism in, 241–2

  Wugong village, 309–11

  Yan’an, 256–7

  cinema in China, 300–301

  Circus (film), 189–91

  civil rights movement, radicalization of, 459–60

/>   civil war in Spain, 194–5

  class, difficulty defining, 145

  class discrimination in China, 357–8

  Cobb, Richard, 197–8

  Cohin, Pierre, 11–12

  Cold War

  causes of, 220–23

  ideological security as basis, 229–32

  collectives

  commitment to, 446

  informal/formal, 442

  personal relationships, time available for, 441–2

  security in, 441

  collectivization

  China, 309–11

  Eastern Europe, 312–13, 414

  post-Stalin, 413

  in the USSR, 151–4

  Colombia, 391

  colonialism, anti-movements, Communism as vehicle for, 236–7

  Comecon, 405, 406, 469

  Cominform, founding conference, 226–7

  Comintern

  congresses: Baku, 237; First, 113, 237; Second, 122, 237

  control over national parties, 124–7

  dissolution in 1943, 206–7

  failure in China, 247–9

  students, 125–6

  Commanding Heights, The (Yergin and Stanislaw), 557

  Communism

  author’s impressions 1984

  and 1987, xvii–ix

  differing views of, ix–xx

  early origins, 2

  Marx’s and Engels’ vision of, 18–20

  fall of, xv–xvi

  modernization story, xx, xxi

  official credo, ix–xx

  prestige in the West in 1930s, 195–9

  repression narrative, xx–xxi

  scientific, 18

  Communist Manifesto, The (Marx), 20, 29

  Confucianism, 239–40, 562

  Connell, James, 51

  Conspiracy of the Damned (film), 229

  consumerism, 446–8

  consumption

  age of, 162

  improvement of, 415–16

  problems in improving, 416–19

  Contras, 529–30

  corruption after Russian revolution, 98

  countryside

  Stalinist policy towards in the 1930s, 151–5

  Stalinist regime’s compromises with in the 1930s, 156

  Croatia, 551

  Cuba

  acceptance of modernist economic regime, 468–9

  attempts to export revolution, 390–92

  Bay of Pigs invasion, 384–6

  Castro’s meeting with Mikoian, 384

  economic crisis 1963, 389

  economic strategy, 565–6

  increased discipline following revolution, 386

  industrialization, 388

  links with USSR, 384

  Marxism in following revolution, 386–9

  missile crisis, 349, 386

  regime following revolution, 383–4, 386–9

  revolution in, 382–3

  Soviet alliance, 386

  US’s neo-colonialism in, 382

  cults

  Mao Zedong, 367–8

  Stalin, 162–3

  Cultural Revolution, China, 358–69, 504

  culture, embourgeoisement of in USSR, 283–4

  Czechoslovakia

  1989 compared to previous revolutionary years, 546

  Ceauşescu’s alliance with reformers, 403

  consequences of USSR’s invasion, 429

  demonstrations in 1989, 545

  and the Marshall plan, 225

  opinions on socialism in 1980s, 511

  Popular Front, 213

  Prague Spring, 425–8

  prospects for Communism in 1945, 213

  Soviet invasion of 1968, 403–4, 427

  as supporters of Popular Front, 209–10

  unrest following Stalin’s death, 331–2

  Dada movement, 104–5

  Dalin, Sergei, 246

  David, Jacques Louis, 1–2, 4–5, 14

  Debord, Guy, 457

  debt crises, 523–7

  Delacroix, Eugène, 16–17

  Deng Xiaoping, 502, 505, 553

  Desanti, Domenique, 292–3

  ‘developed socialism’, 429–30

  dialectical materialism, 39–40

  ‘Diary of a Madman, The’ (Lu Xun), 239–40

  Dimitrov, G., 212

  dissidence, responses to, 511–13

  Djilas, Milovan, 214, 217, 218, 219, 317–18, 320–21

  Djugashvili, Ioseb, see Stalin, Iosif (Ioseb Djugashvili)

  Dostoyevsky, Fyodor, 68–9

  dress reform campaign in China, 301–2

  Dubček, Alexander, 424, 427

  Duch, Comrade, 487–8

  Dudintsev, Vladimir, 339–41

  Dulles, John Foster, 325

  Dumouriez, Charles, 10

  Duranty, Paul, 197

  East Germany, see German Democratic Republic (GDR)

  Eastern Europe

  1989 compared to previous revolutionary years, 546

  allocation of capital as problem, 417–18

  anti-Semitism brought into from USSR, 289

  banks, investment by, 432–3

  appeal of Communism after Second World War, 285–6

  cars, provision of, 416

  collectivization, 312–13, 414

  concessions to workers, 307–8, 414

  consumption, improvement of, 415–16

  consumption, reducing, 288

  debt crises, 523–7

  disillusion with Communism, 287–8

  dissent in late 1980s, 542–3

  hierarchies in industry, 305–7

  impact of Stalin’s death, 330–33

  leaders of as subordinates in Moscow, 290–92

  limits of Soviet support for, 525–6

  middle classes under Communism, 286

  nationalism, 415, 548

  neo-liberalism in, 559–60

  oil-price increase 1973, impact of, 432

  opinions of socialism in 1980s, 511

  Orange Alternative, 542–3

  Popular Fronts in, 211–19

  problems improving consumption, 416–19

  production at the centre of life, 287

  religion in, 414

 

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