Join the Haymarket Book Club to take 50% off Everything!
Description
Brimming with the honesty and passionate conviction for which he has become famous, Victor Serge’s account of the first year of the Russian Revolution—through all of its achievements and challenges—captures both the heroism of the mass upsurge that gave birth to soviet democracy, and the crippling circumstances that began to chip away at its historic gains. Year One of the Russian Revolution is Serge’s attempt to defend the early days of the revolution against those, like Stalin, who would claim its legacy as justification for the repression of dissent within Russia.
Author Bios

Victor Serge (1889-1947) is best known as a novelist – with two of his works recently republished by the New York Review of Books – and for his Memoirs of a Revolutionary. Originally a participant in the anarchist movement, Serge became a committed bolshevik upon arrival in Russia during 1919 and lent his considerable talents to the cause of spreading the revolution across Europe. An eloquent critic of tyranny no matter its form, Serge was a leading member of the Left Opposition in its struggle against Stalin, a cause which ultimately resulted in his exile from Russia.

Peter Sedgwick (1934–1983) was a lifelong activist and a founding member of the New Left in Britain, and one of the first translators of Serge's work into English. In addition to his journalism and political writings, he is the author of, Psycho-Politics.

More Info

Publication date: July 21, 2015

Table of Contents
Preface by Paul Foot / v
Introduction by Peter Sedgwick /1
Forward by Victor Serge / 18

1 From serfdom to proletarian revolution / 23
2 The insurrection of 25 October 1917
3 The urban middle class against the proletariat / 79
4 The first flames of the civil war:
The Constituent Assembly / 107
5 Brest– Litovsk / 142
6 The truce and the great retrenchment / 177
7 The famine and the Czechoslovak intervention / 211
8 The July- August crisis / 250
9 The terror and the will to victory / 282
10 The German Revolution / 316
11 War communism / 352


Notes / 377
Editorial postscript
The Allied part in the Czechoslovak intervention / 431
Index / 441

Maps:

1 Western Russia / 250
2 Siberia / 251
3 The Black Sea and the Caspian Sea / 253



Reviews

Blog Posts

In commemoration of the 100 year anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Haymarket Books has compiled a list of essential books for those interested in learning the lessons of the first successful workers' revolution.

Tsar Nicholas II of Russia abdicated a hundred years ago today, bringing to an end three centuries of Romanov rule. In this extract from his History of the Russian Revolution, Trotsky describes the final days of Imperial Russia. Incompetent, vain, and almost comically ignorant of the historic events unfolding around it, the Tsarist regime fell, in Trotsky's words, "like rotten fruit."
One of the greatest lessons the Russian state learned on March 8, 1917 was never to underestimate the women of Petrograd.  On that fateful morning, International Women’s Day, women workers threw down their tools and walked out of the factories and into the streets.

Other books by the authors