The "key articles" section just below the upper right hand side of the page might be a good place to begin.
The Unknown Revolution by Voline gives a good general overview of the revolution from the perspective of an anarchist participant in the revolution. However I don't know how much stock that I'd place on some of the largely anecdotal claims that Voline levels against the personal character of Nestor Makhno in the books section on the Ukraine. Voline and Makhno reportedly never did get on too well but even so since Voline was an eyewitness and participant in the Makhnovist movement I don't think that his claims can necessarily be discounted out of hand either.
As a contributor of a chapter, I have the pdf -- and it is a very good collection of texts. My chapter is entitled "The State and Revolution: Theory and Practice" and tries to summarise section H of An Anarchist FAQ.
I would recommend section H.6, which is entitled "Why did the Russian Revolution fail?" -- this is in volume 2 of the printed version.
Some reading
Some reading guides:
http://libcom.org/library/russian-revolution-1917-reading-guide
http://libcom.org/library/russian-revolution-1917-further-reading-guide
I personally like Paul Avrich's Kronstadt 1921 as an authoritative work on the Kronstadt uprising and the context it happened in.
The Libcom "tags" page on the
The Libcom "tags" page on the Russian Rev.:
https://libcom.org/tags/russian-revolution
The "key articles" section just below the upper right hand side of the page might be a good place to begin.
The Unknown Revolution by Voline gives a good general overview of the revolution from the perspective of an anarchist participant in the revolution. However I don't know how much stock that I'd place on some of the largely anecdotal claims that Voline levels against the personal character of Nestor Makhno in the books section on the Ukraine. Voline and Makhno reportedly never did get on too well but even so since Voline was an eyewitness and participant in the Makhnovist movement I don't think that his claims can necessarily be discounted out of hand either.
China Mieville's October is
China Mieville's October is good. It incorporates some new academic stuff into a lucid narrative.
Does anyone know where I get
Does anyone know where I get get my hands on a copy of Carmen Sirianni's book 'Workers control and socialist democracy'?
A new one in Spanish: Carlos
A new one in Spanish:
Carlos Taibo - Anarquismo y RevoluciĆ³n en Rusia (1917-1921)
Interview with the author
I should also mention the
I should also mention the newly published book by AK Press:
Bloodstained: One Hundred Years of Leninist Counterrevolution
As a contributor of a chapter, I have the pdf -- and it is a very good collection of texts. My chapter is entitled "The State and Revolution: Theory and Practice" and tries to summarise section H of An Anarchist FAQ.
I would recommend section H.6, which is entitled "Why did the Russian Revolution fail?" -- this is in volume 2 of the printed version.
mikail firtinaci wrote: China
mikail firtinaci
i'm in a discussion series now using this as the text.
Ida Mett "The Kronstadt
Ida Mett "The Kronstadt Uprising", about to be reissued by Theory and Practice
In before alanjohnstone. A
In before alanjohnstone.
A ~230 page book published only last week.
http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/catalog/books/centenary-russian-revolution
and a review of October by China Mieville which I wasn't as impressed with
http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/socialist-standard/2010s/2017/no-1359-november-2017/book-reviews-lenin-dictator-intimate-portrait-oc
I liked A People's Tragedy by Orlando Figes but I'm not sure it could be said to be an anarchist/ revolutionary working class perspective. I believe Service / Conquest / Applebaum are from a conservative perspective and that Figes might be said to be a 'liberal' perspective.
Quote: In before
Got to be up early to beat me, JDW :)
Although it is on its own thread and not this one
https://libcom.org/forums/announcements/spgb-new-book-russian-revolution-23102017