Prof. Julie Hessler

email:  hessler@uoregon.edu

Office hours:  Fridays, 12:00-2:00, McKenzie 351

Mondays, 12:000-1:00, PLC 271

Telephone:  346-4857 (McKenzie office), 302-9032 (home)

 

 

HISTORY 347:  THE SOVIET UNION AND CONTEMPORARY RUSSIA

 

MWF 11:00-11:50, Volcanology 307

  

 

Description:  This is an introductory lecture survey course on the history of Russia and the Soviet Union since 1917.  It is open to all interested undergraduates, without prerequisite.  Grades will be based on a midterm (25%), a final exam (40%), and n 8-9 page paper on one of several assigned topics (35%).  Active, thoughtful participation may raise your grade by a couple of percentage points (e.g. from 82 to 84).  Failure to take one of the exams or to turn in a paper, plagiarism on the paper, or a failing grade on the final exam will mean an automatic F in the course.

 

Required readings (available at the bookstore):

 

            Sheila Fitzpatrick, The Russian Revolution

            Fyodor V. Gladkov, Cement

            Miron Dolot, Execution by Hunger:  The Hidden Holocaust

            Richard Overy, Russia’s War:  A History of the Soviet War Effort, 1941-1945

            Stephen Kotkin, Armageddon Averted

 

Week 1.  Revolution.  Reading:  Russian Revolution, 1-68.

 

            M  Apr. 3  Russia in 1914:  an overview

 

            W  Apr. 5  From World War I to revolution

 

            F  Apr. 7  The Bolsheviks:  ideology, leadership, policies, methods

 

Week 2.  The new regime.  Reading:  Russian Revolution, 68-92; Cement, 1-198.

 

M  Apr. 10  Reds and Whites in the Civil War.

 

W  Apr. 12  Begin discussing Cement.  (prepare pp. 1-75).  Guest lecturer:  Prof. Jenifer Presto (Russian and Comparative Literature).

 

F  Apr. 14  The rough transition:  famine, inflation, and rebellion, 1921-22, and the institutions of Soviet power.  Continue discussing Cement (prepare pp. 76-198).

 

Week 3.  NEP.  Reading:  Cement, 199-311; Russian Revolution, 93-134.

 

M  Apr. 17  Finish discussing Cement.

 

W  Apr. 19   Politics and the economy in the 1920s

 

F  Apr. 21  Sovietization of the non-Russian regions:  the case of Uzbekistan

 

Week 4.  The “Stalin revolution.”  Reading:  Execution by Hunger (all); Russian Revolution, 135-47.

 

M  Apr. 24  Collectivization:  the triple assault on peasant life.  Begin discussing Execution by Hunger.

 

W  Apr. 26  Famine, social control, and the question of Stalin’s attitude toward Ukraine.  Finish discussing Execution by Hunger.

 

F  Apr. 28  Stalinist culture in the 1930s:  in-class film, The Radiant Path.

 

Week 5. Stalinist terror.  Reading:  Russian Revolution, 148-72; Bukharin’s letter to Stalin (e-reserves).  Optional:  Russia’s War, 1-33.

 

M  May 1  Discuss film.  Lecture and discussion:  from the Kirov murder to the “Great Terror”:  terror and the Soviet elite.  Prepare Russian Revolution, 148-72.

 

W  May 3  The “Great Terror,” continued.  Discuss Bukharin’s letter to Stalin; lecture on mass operations and Soviet ethnic cleansing.

 

F  May 5  Midterm exam.

 

Week 6.  The “Great Patriotic War.”  Reading:  Russia’s War, xiii-xxi and 34-222.

 

M  May 8  The tables turn:  Stalin’s foreign policy and the German invasion (prepare Russia’s War, introduction and 34-98).

 

W  May 10  Soldiers’ and civilians’ experience of total war (prepare pp. 99-153).

 

F  May 12  Two battles:  Stalingrad and Kursk (prepare 154-222).

 

Week 7.  The war and its aftermath.  Reading:  Russia’s War, 223-330.

 

M  May 15  Victory and the legacy of the war (prepare Russia’s War, 223-320) (slide show on Stalin’s cult).

 

W  May 17  Guest lecturer:  Prof. Barbara Walker (University of Nevada, Reno)

 

F  May 19  Discuss guest lecturer; lecture on Soviet society and destalinization.

 

Week 8.  Khrushchev’s “Thaw” and the normalization of Soviet communism.  Reading:  Geoffrey Hosking, “Religion, Nationality, and Dissent,” (e-reserves); Andrei Sakharov et al., “Manifesto II” (e-reserves).

 

M  May 22  Andrei Sakharov and the dissident movement.  Discuss Sakharov, “Manifesto II.”

 

W  May 24  Central Asia revisited:  Environmental degradation and social change (lecture).

 

F  May 26  Religion in the Soviet Union (prepare Hosking).

 

Week 9.  Perestroika.  Reading:  Armageddon Averted, 1-85.

 

M  May 29  No class:  Memorial Day

 

W  May 31  Economic stagnation, Afghanistan, and the roots of perestroika.

 

F  June 2  Gorbachev’s reforms.  Prepare Armageddon Averted.

 

Week 10.  After communism.  Reading:  Armageddon Averted, 85-196.

 

M  June 5  The collapse of the USSR.  Prepare pp. 86-112.

 

W  June 7  Russia, the army, and Chechnya.  Final research paper due in class

 

F  June 9  Russia since 1991.  Discuss Armageddon Averted, 113-96.

 

Final exam:  10:15 Friday, June 16.