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Title: Stalin: The Five-Year Plans and the Purges


1
Stalin The Five-Year Plans and the Purges
  • McKay Chapter 29 (957-963) Palmer 18.95

2
Todays Agenda
  • Finish Stalin Revolution
  • Objective Test on WWI to Russian Revolution
    Thursday
  • Corrected DBQs due tomorrow

3
Totalitarian dictatorships
  • Emerged in Soviet Union, Germany, and Italy
  • Rejected parliamentary and liberal values
    (including rationality, peaceful progress,
    economic freedom, and a strong middle class)
  • State regulates nearly every aspect of public and
    private behavior
  • Characterized by
  • secret police
  • propaganda disseminated through the
    state-controlled mass media
  • personality cults
  • regulation and restriction of free discussion and
    criticism
  • single-party states
  • use of mass surveillance
  • terror tactics
  • Extreme nationalism
  • sought full control mobilize over the masses
  • believed in will power, conflict, the worship of
    violence
  • USSR was totalitarianism of the left
  • Nazi Germany was totalitarianism of the right

4
Review
  • 1860s- Era of Reform
  • Fundamental Institutions altered
  • Serfdom ended
  • Zemstvos
  • 1890s
  • Reactionary period (Alexander III)
  • Stolypin Policies
  • Industrialization
  • Kulaks supported
  • Political Parties Form
  • Kadets
  • Populists
  • Social Democratic Party
  • Mensheviks
  • Bolsheviks
  • Marxists-Leninists
  • 1905
  • Russo Japanese War
  • Bloody Sunday
  • 1914 (WWI)
  • 1917
  • February Rev. (March)
  • Petrograd Food Riots
  • Provisional Gov v PetroSov
  • May
  • Army Order 1
  • October Rev. (Nov)
  • Peace, Land and Bread
  • 1918-Brest Litovsk
  • 1918-1922- Civil War
  • Red Army
  • War Communism
  • Cheka
  • Red Terror
  • 1921-1927
  • New Economic Policy (NEP) (1924
  • Stalin v Trotsky

5
Crane Brinton The Anatomy of Revolution
  • Moderate Period
  • Feb-Oct 1917
  • Age of Montesquieu
  • Constitution
  • Liberal moderates Kadets (nobles bourgeoisie)
    in control
  • Provisional Gov.
  • Duma
  • Limited Change
  • Limited enfranchise-ment
  • Legal equality, not social
  • Radical
  • Revolution Reignited
  • 1921-1953
  • Stalins Revolution
  • 5 Year Plans
  • Collectivization
  • Forced Industrialization
  • Great Purges
  • Liquidation of Counter- Revolutionaries
  • Radical Period
  • Oct 1917-1921
  • Age of Rousseau
  • Republic
  • Strong central government
  • Radicals in control
  • Bolshevik Rev.
  • Radical Revolutionary Change
  • Total enfranchise- ment
  • Terror (Cheka)
  • Regicide
  • Command economy (War Communism)
  • Utopian/ idealized vision
  • Thermidorian Period
  • 1921-1927
  • Age of Smith
  • Oligarchy
  • Gov. pro Bourgeoisie (Kulak)
  • New Economic Policy
  • Idealized visions of Rev forgotten
  • Period of decadence
  • Free Market economy
  • High Inflation

6
Stalins Soviet Union
Great Purges
Russian Revolution
Collectivization Begins
Lenin Dies
Operation Barbarossa
1917 1921 1924 1927 1929 1936
1939 1941
-Red Army defeats White Army -NEP begins
First Five Year Plan (1928)
Molotov Ribbentropp Pact
Stalin Emerges as the Leader
7
The New Economic Policy, 1921 1927
  • A strategic retreat
  • By 1920 the country is in ruins
  • War Communism had antagonized peasants
  • Produced only 62 of pre-Revolution land
  • Also dealing with drought, famine, transportation
    problems, WWI, Revolution, Civil War, The Terror,
    war communism
  • 50-90 in 17 provinces starving
  • Steel textile production only 4 of 1913 levels
  • Millions died
  • Lenin
  • believed that revolution (socialism) was going to
    fast
  • ordered a compromise with capitalism (a strategic
    retreat)

8
The New Economic Policy, 1921 1927
  • A relaxation of the Terror and tempo of the
    socialist movement
  • State still controlled the commanding heights
    of the economy
  • Banks, RR, heavy industry
  • But allowed private trading for private profit
  • Effort was intended to increase trade between
    town and country
  • Peasants could sell excess produce for
    manufactured goods
  • NEP was pro Kulak
  • Led to the growth of a Neo-bourgeois
  • Nouveau riches in a classless society
  • Reached 1913 level of production by 1926
  • A thermidorian period?

9
Stalin and Trotsky
  • Lenin died in 1924 Lenin after series of strokes
    (54 years old)
  • Had been incapacitated for 2 years before death
  • Trotsky and Stalin were top two candidates for
    position
  • Stalin (background)
  • Expelled from theological seminary
  • Joined Bolsheviks in 1903
  • Poor speaker, writer
  • Appointed General Secretary of Communist Party
  • Not viewed as very influential post (at first)
  • Used it to appoint allies
  • Good organizer, palm greaser

Click for Clip (0-6min)
10
Stalin and Trotsky
  • Trotsky
  • Colorful and bombastic ideologue
  • Called for permanent revolution
  • Communism must spread
  • Girondistic weltanschauung
  • Called for forceful industrialization and
    collectivization of agriculture
  • Demanded the adoption of an overall Plan
  • Stalin
  • Covert, subtle, politically practical
  • Called for socialism in one country
  • Montagnardic weltanschauung
  • 95 percent of the party delegates voted for
    Stalin at the party congress (1927)
  • Trotsky was exiled and banished to Siberia
  • Lived in Turkey, France, and Mexico
  • Organized an underground against Stalin
  • Was murdered in Mexico in 1940
  • Name not mentioned in Russian textbooks until
    1980s

11
The First Five-Year Plan (1928-32)
  • Known as second revolution Revolution from
    above
  • Aim was to make nation militarily and
    industrially self-sufficient
  • Stalin (1929)-We are becoming a country of
    metal, a country of automobiles, a country of
    tractors
  • Declared fulfilled in 1932
  • Second 5 Year Plan (32-37)
  • Third 5 Year Plan (38- WWII)
  • Plan listed economic goals
  • 250 increase in industrial output
  • 150 increase in agricultural output

"The Victory of the Five Year Plan is a Strike
Against Capitalism"
12
The First Five-Year Plan (1928-32)
  • Gosplan
  • Planned the economy
  • Answered all economic questions
  • how much to produce
  • amount of capital to produce
  • amount of consumer goods
  • wages, prices
  • Created a command planned economy
  • Why?
  • Stalin feared Thermidorian (capitalism)
  • Wanted to catch up to the West
  • Feared establishment of conservative land-owning
    peasantry

This poster from 1929 attacks eight groups that
were frequently scapegoated (clockwise from top
left) landlords, kulaks, journalists,
capitalists, White Russians, Mensheviks, priests,
and drunkards
13
Goals of the First Five Year Plan
  • Main goal of 1st 5
  • Build up heavy industry without foreign loans
  • Make USSR self sufficient
  • History offered no paradigm of going from
    agriculture to industrial based economy without
    borrowing capital
  • GB industrialization aided by Dutch investment
  • GB first had agricultural revolution (land
    enclosure, scientific cultivation)
  • This released rural population to find employment
    in factories
  • 1st Five attempted similar feat without
    landowning class
  • How?

"Long live the international socialist
revolution!"
14
The Collectivization of Agriculture
  • Collectivization (1928-1940)
  • Part of 1st 5 Year Plan to convert small,
    privately owned farms into large, collectively
    owned farms
  • peasantry would become proletariat (owned no
    capital, employed no labor individually)
  • Goals
  • Increase food supply
  • Free up labor for factory work
  • Collective farms
  • a few thousand acres each
  • Kolkhozy
  • owned by peasants themselves (the collective)
  • Paid tax in produce
  • Mir paradigm
  • Sovkhozy
  • State owned
  • Mass produced one product

Soviet Collectivization Propaganda (1930). The
poster reads "Hey Friend, Come with us into the
Collective!" 
15
Effects of Collectivization
  • Before 1928
  • average peasant was too poor to afford a tractor,
    fields too small and dispersed
  • After Collectivization
  • Machine Tractors Stations
  • organized throughout country with expert
    agronomist, a fleet of tractors, combines
  • Each collective was assigned a quota
  • Almost whole nation was collectivized by 1939
  • Was Collectivization successful?
  • Did free up labor (20 million) to work in cities
    (industrialization)
  • Did not increase food production
  • Denied peasants freedom to make their own
    economic decision, killed incentive to improve
    land, passing land to offspring

16
Collectivization in Soviet Union 1927-1940
17
Human Costs of Collectivization
Click for clip (834-15
  • Kulaks (large landowning peasants) resistance
  • Viewed collectivization as the Second Serfdom
  • Stalin said liquidate them as a class
  • Kulaks slaughtered horses, cattle, pigs, rather
    than give them up (50)
  • Loss of animals was worst unforeseen calamity
  • Stalin still refused to cut back on cereal and
    food exports because they were needed to pay for
    industrial imports (under 1st 5 Year Plan)
  • millions were killed/others transported to labor
    camps in Siberia
  • Many of the most capable farmers perished
  • Led to deadly famine in southeast Russia and
    Ukraine in 32-33
  • 6 Millions died

Soviet Collectivization Village Propaganda(1929)
The Poster Reads "On our collective there is no
room for priests or kulaks"
18
The Growth of Industry
  • Greatest industrial growth in 10 year period in
    history
  • GB growth was gradual, Germany and US it was
    rapid (USSR was light speed)
  • 1928-38 USSR increased production of iron and
    steel 4xs, coal 3.5xs, became largest producer of
    farm tractors, RR locomotives
  • Plants of Magnitogorsk in the Urals and Stalinsk
    in Siberia produced as much iron and steel as the
    whole Russia empire did in 1914
  • Only the US and Germany had greater gross
    industrial output in 1939
  • Plans called for development of industry east of
    Urals (Asia)
  • Copper mines near Lake Balkhash, lead mines in
    Altai Mountains were developed
  • Grain producing regions developed in Siberia and
    Kazakh
  • Tashkent (formerly remote village in Uzbek) grew
    to city of .5 million and a hub of cotton, copper
    mining, electrical industries
  • RR of 38 carried 5xs that of 1913

Early Soviet poster The Smoke of chimneys is the
breath of Soviet Russia
19
Changes Brought by Modernization
  • Incredibly inner Asia was turning industrial
  • USSR was carrying on more trade with its Asian
    neighbors (although less foreign trade than in
    1914)
  • Industrialization in the Urals and Asia saved
    Russia in 41 (Barbarossa)
  • BUT
  • its easy to exaggerate USSRs industrialization
  • Started from almost nothing
  • Low standards of production (shoddy work)
  • Low efficiency and output compared to West
  • Produced less coal, electricity, cotton, woolens,
    leather shoes, and steel per capita than almost
    all Western nations
  • Paper is good indicator (index) of
    industrialization, civilizing activities
  • 1937 US 103 pounds per person
  • Germany and GB 92
  • Japan 17
  • Russia 11

Let's make stronger industrial power of Soviet
Union ! 1932
20
Social Costs and Effects of the Plans
  • Soviet citizens had to forgo consumer goods
  • Lack of quality food, housing,
  • Kulaks and others who resisted were killed
  • 1/3rd of national income was reinvested in
    industry every year
  • Hard work for low wages
  • Morale sustained by propaganda
  • Late 1930s life began to ease
  • food rationing abolished (1935)
  • More products (dishes, pens) began to appear
  • Living standards 1927 levels
  • Threat of war and need for preparation kyboshed
    the utopian dream
  • Socialism did eliminate some of capitalisms evils
  • No acknowledged unemployment
  • No cycle of boom and depression
  • No exploitation of children, women
  • No extremely wealthy class
  • But no economic equality (actually great
    difference in income)
  • Govern officials, managers, engineers, artists,
    and intellectuals of the Party were rewarded

21
Competition
  • Alexey Stakhanov
  • Coal miner who was propagandized as a Hero of
    Socialist Labor
  • mined a record 102 tons of coal in under 6 hours
  • 14 times his quota
  • Greatly increased his wages (piece rate)
  • Led to increased competition as other workers
    began to set production records
  • Stakhanovites (labor heroes) were held up by
    government (IE. A production line speed up)
  • Factory managers who failed to reach their quota
    (profit) could lose job, status, or life
  • Poor management was viewed as sabotage or a
    betrayal of Soviet society
  • Press denounced those who didnt meet the plan

Soviet Medal for Labor Valor
22
The Price of Solidarity
  • Feeling of building a socialist motherland was
    prevalent
  • Became national pastime to watch the mounting
    statistics, fulfilling of quotas
  • Instead of sports, readers read about the economy
  • This solidarity came with totalitarianism
  • Gov supervised everything
  • No room for skeptics, independence of thought
  • No one could leave country without permission
    (given rarely)
  • No free labor union, no free press, association,
    only slight toleration of religion
  • Jews harassed
  • Untold millions perished, were imprisoned, forced
    labor camps in Stalins juggernaut

Shaming Winners of the "infamous banner for a
tortoise's pace."
23
Socialist Realism
  • Officially approved art of the Communist Party
  • Loaded with propaganda
  • A reaction against decadent bourgeois art of
    impressionism and cubism
  • purpose was to elevate the common worker
  • Factory and agricultural worker
  • presenting his life, work, and recreation as
    admirable
  • ultimate aim was to create New Soviet Man
  • Man will make it his purpose to master his own
    feelings, to raise his instincts to the heights
    of consciousness, to make them transparent, to
    extend the wires of his will into hidden
    recesses, and thereby to raise himself to a new
    plain plane, to create a higher social biologic
    type, or, if you please, a superman.

Soviet poet Vladimir Mayakovsky Who needs a
"1"?The voice of a "1" is thinner than a
squeak.Who will hear it? Only the wife...A "1" is
nonsense. A "1" is zero.
24
Constitution of 1936
  • New constitution proclaimed in 1936 (because
    socialism was so successful)
  • Gave rights
  • employment, rest, leisure, economic security,
    social security
  • Condemned racism, gave equal and universal
    suffrage
  • At first applauded in the west
  • Communist Party remained sole governing group
  • Diverging opinions within the Party led to
    conspiracy (since one could not question Stalin
    himself)

25
The Great Purges
  • Series of Show Trials between 1936-38 of Old
    Bolsheviks accused of traitorous activities
  • Trying to assassinate Stalin
  • Restore capitalism
  • Dismember Soviet Union
  • Being part of "Trotskyite Terrorist Centre"
  • Verdicts predetermined
  • Confessed their crimes after torture threats
    to family members and promptly executed by firing
    squad

26
The Great Purges
  • Began when Serge Kirov, old friend of Stalin and
    head of Lenigrad party apparatus, Politburo
    member was assassinated in his office
  • Actually murdered by Stalins men for showing
    signs of dissention
  • Stalin used this assassination as excuse for
    further terror
  • Over 100 Bolsheviks executed
  • KGB later disclosed that from 1930-1953 3,778,334
    persons had been tried for crimes against the
    state
  • Most of them during Great Terror of 1934-38
  • 786,098 were executed
  • Unknown others died in labor/prison camps
  • Gulag Archipelago
  • Soviet forced labor and concentration camp system

Click for Stalin Documentary
27
(No Transcript)
28
Reinforcing the Dictatorship
  • Stalin rid himself of the Old Bols who knew Lenin
    and potential rivals
  • Young revolutionaries were products of the new
    order
  • Didnt question Stalins dictatorship

Click for Clip 650 (5 Year Plan)
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