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Wyszukujesz frazę "Revolution of February" wg kryterium: Temat


Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2
Tytuł:
Zamach stanu czy rewolucja społeczna? Październik 1917 w historiografii przełomu XX i XXI wieku – wybrane publikacje i problemy
Autorzy:
Kulecka, Alicja
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/690010.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla PAN w Warszawie
Tematy:
historia społeczna
październikowy zamach stanu 1917
rewolucja lutowa 1917
bolszewizm
liberalizm
Aleksander Kiereński
Vladimir Lenin
social history
the coup d’etat of October 1917
the February Revolution of 1917
bolshevism
liberalism
Alexander Kerensky
Opis:
Celem niniejszych rozważań jest próba ukazania zasadniczych dzieł i tez dorobku historiografii światowej przełomu XX i XXI w. odnoszących się do wydarzeń Października 1917 związanych z przejęciem władzy w Rosji przez partię bolszewików kierowanych przez Władimira Lenina. Zaprezentowane refleksje zostały osnute wokół pytania o charakter tego przełomu – czy był on rewolucją społeczną, stanowiącą wynik niezadowolenia mas, chęci zmiany własnej kondycji ekonomicznej i socjalnej, wiążącej się z nowymi potrzebami kulturowymi, czy też zamachem stanu będącym rezultatem działania wąskiej, partyjnej elity zintegrowanej wokół wodza, kierującej się interesami definiowanymi własną ideologią, lekceważącej istniejący system prawny i osiągającej cele z pominięciem panujących w nim zasad.
At the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, different historiographies began to move away from the interpretations that treated the October revolution as a separate subject of study. The revolution has come to be inserted in a series of events and presented as just one section of a long process. An important part of creating the narrative on the revolution concerns the search for its general historical meaning. From the liberal perspective, the events of October 1917 are seen as a coup d’etat that resulted in the establishment of the Bolsheviks’ rule, to which they could claim no legal right. However, it was the following civil war which ended in the Bolsheviks’ victory that enabled the Soviet system to take hold. The construction of the new state and the new society was made possible by the defeat inflicted on the Whites in the civil war. The revolution was thus only the first step on the road to establishing communist totalitarianism. From this perspective, one is justified in questioning the revolution’s reputedly crucial role in bringing about a significant historic change. In discussing these issues, scholars have been led to explore the possibility of making the liberal ideology take root in the non-modernised societies. One of the questions posed is whether the liberal ideology gives rise to the civil society or the civil society makes the dissemination of the ideology possible. In Russia in 1917, the public sentiments were largely shaped by those who had only recently stopped being considered slaves of the absolute monarchy, and the experience of representative institutions such as Parliament was still very limited. The fact that the rhetoric of social revolution is no longer used for interpreting the events of October 1917 can be regarded as proof that the founding myth of the Bolshevik Russia and its ideological legacy – the Soviet Union – did not survive the collapse of the state. It has been replaced by the narrative about the political coup d’etat that did not have social support.
Źródło:
Klio Polska. Studia i Materiały z Dziejów Historiografii Polskiej; 2016, 8
2450-8381
2450-8373
Pojawia się w:
Klio Polska. Studia i Materiały z Dziejów Historiografii Polskiej
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Akt 5 listopada a umiędzynarodowienie sprawy polskiej podczas Wielkiej Wojny. Uwagi historyka dyplomacji
The Act of 5th November and the international nature of the Polish cause during World War I. Comments provided by a diplomacy historian
Autorzy:
Kornat, Marek
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2164423.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017-06-30
Wydawca:
Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek
Tematy:
Manifest dwóch cesarzy z 5 listopada 1916 r.
sprawa polska
pierwsza wojna światowa
Rewolucja Lutowa w Rosji
A declaration of two emperors of 5th November 1916
the Polish cause
World War I
the February Revolution in Russia
Opis:
The author engages in polemics with the thesis that the Act of 5th November was a breakthrough in Poland’s efforts to regain its statehood. However, this declaration of establishment of the Polish state made by the governments in Berlin and Vienna and the Western powers (France and Great Britain) were not able to force Russia to acknowledge Poland’s independence. There was no such need as the other countries wanted Russia to forge an alliance as part of the Triple Entente. The author analyses the international importance of the Act of 5th November from the point of view of the future of Poland in the post-WWI international deal. The declaration of two emperors represented an “important step towards Poland’s reconstruction” (as Szymon Askenazy, a Polish historian, observed). However, the declaration failed to ultimately internationalize the Polish cause and determined itself the existence of the Polish state. The document was a product of special circumstances resulting from the fact that Germany was running out of human resources indispensable to continue the war. It was also possible because of the abortive attempts at securing peace with Russia on the basis of a territorial status quo. The declaration represented Berlin’s grand-scale political move, connecting with the history of the German political thought with assumptions originated by Bismarck and general Waldersee and revolving around the idea of establishing a small Polish state when it is necessary in the course of a war with Russia. Despite the proclaimed establishment of the Polish state by the governments in Berlin and Vienna, the Western powers (France and Great Britain) were not able to force Russia to acknowledge Poland’s independence. They assigned the government in Petrograd the right to deal with the Polish cause at its discretion i.e. to delineate the Western border of the empire according to its will once the acts of war were over. The historian therefore concludes that it was not before the February Revolution in Russia when actual possibilities opened up for the Western powers to support the Polish cause. In their policies, they did not include willingness to make the world a better place by principles of international justice but rather, they intended to maintain Russia as an allied force in the anti-German coalition at all cost.
Źródło:
Historia Slavorum Occidentis; 2017, 2 (13); 11-28
2084-1213
Pojawia się w:
Historia Slavorum Occidentis
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-2 z 2

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