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Translated from the Russian in 1933, this and the first volume of
the same title give an invaluable picture of what the Russian
leader Joseph Stalin understood by Leninism. Building on the
pamphlet Foundations of Leninism, (which forms the first part of
this book) the work presents a unified and complete work on the
problems of Leninism and socialist construction as they were
manifested in the 1920s, as well as discussion of the October
Revolution and the relationship of the USSR and the West in the
years following the First World War.
Translated from the Russian in 1928, this and the second volume of
the same title give an invaluable picture of what the Russian
leader Joseph Stalin understood by Leninism. Building on the
pamphlet Foundations of Leninism, (which forms the first part of
this book) the work presents a unified and complete work on the
problems of Leninism and socialist construction as they were
manifested in the 1920s, as well as discussion of the October
Revolution and the relationship of the USSR and the West in the
years following the First World War.
Translated from the Russian in 1933, this and the first volume of
the same title give an invaluable picture of what the Russian
leader Joseph Stalin understood by Leninism. Building on the
pamphlet Foundations of Leninism, (which forms the first part of
this book) the work presents a unified and complete work on the
problems of Leninism and socialist construction as they were
manifested in the 1920s, as well as discussion of the October
Revolution and the relationship of the USSR and the West in the
years following the First World War.
Translated from the Russian in 1928, this and the second volume of
the same title give an invaluable picture of what the Russian
leader Joseph Stalin understood by Leninism. Building on the
pamphlet Foundations of Leninism, (which forms the first part of
this book) the work presents a unified and complete work on the
problems of Leninism and socialist construction as they were
manifested in the 1920s, as well as discussion of the October
Revolution and the relationship of the USSR and the West in the
years following the First World War.
We are fifty or a hundred years behind the advanced countries. We
must make good this distance in ten years. Either we do it, or they
will crush us. The First Five-Year Plan, or 1st Five-Year Plan, of
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) was a list of
economic goals that was designed to strengthen the country's
economy between 1928 and 1932. The main concerns of the First
Five-Year Plan focused on making the nation militarily,
industrially, and financially self-sufficient. The introduction of
collectivization spurred industrialization in the nation as
millions of people, of the 80% of the total population that was
engaged in agriculture, moved from the country into the city.
Despite many of the targets being unbelievably high (a 250%
increase in overall industrial development, with a 330% percent
expansion in heavy industry), remarkable results were achieved.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
CONTENTSIntroductionThe Political SituationReplies to
QuestionsSpeech in Reply to DebateReply to Preobrazhensky on Point
9 of the Resolution "On the Political Situation"Election DayWe
Demand The Second WaveAll Power to the SovietsA Government of the
Bourgeois DictatorshipThe Counter-Revolution is Mobilising -
Prepare to Resist Soviet PowerAn Examination in InsolenceSpeech at
the Meeting of the Central Committee, October 29, 1917What do we
Need?
This is a new release of the original 1941 edition.
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