Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781501768347 Academic Inspection Copy

Under Stalin's Shadow

A Global History of Greek Communism
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview
Under Stalin's Shadow examines the history of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) from 1918 to 1956, showing how closely national Communism was related to international developments. The history of the KKE reveals the role of Moscow in the various Communist parties of Southeastern Europe, as Nikos Marantzidis shows that Communism's international institutions (Moscow Center, Comintern, Balkan Communist Federation, Cominform, and sister parties in the Balkans) were not merely external factors influencing orientation and policy choices. Based on research from published and unpublished archival documents located in Greece, Russia, Eastern and Western Europe, and the Balkan countries, Under Stalin's Shadow traces the KKE movement's interactions with fraternal parties in neighboring states and with their acknowledged supreme mentors in Stalin's Soviet Russia. Marantzidis reveals how, because the boundaries between the national and international in the Communist world were not clearly drawn, international institutions, geopolitical soviet interests, and sister parties' strategies shaped in fundamental ways the KKE's leadership, its character and decision making as a party, and the way of life of its followers over the years.
Nikos Marantzidis is Professor of Political Science in the Balkan, Slavic, and Oriental Studies Department at the University of Macedonia and Visiting Professor at Charles University in Prague. He has published extensively on Greek and European Communism and Greek civil war history.
Introduction: A Global History of Greek Communism Part I: Interwar, 1918-39 1. Becoming Balkan Bolsheviks 2. Balkan Communism and the National Question 3. Becoming Greek Stalinists Part II: World War II and the Early Cold War Years, 1939-56 4. Greek Dilemmas 5. Balkan Decisions 6. The Displaced People's Republics Epilogue
Based on a rich multiarchival and multilingual source pool from Greece, eastern Europe, and western Europe, Marantzidis succeeds in presenting a fascinating story of a rather tragic nature in which ideology, dreams, ambitions, and ideals clashed with harsh realities, power dynamics, and more than often shrewd expediency. (H-Net) Nikos Marantzidis's new book on the history of the Greek Communist Party (Kommounistiko Komma Ellados, KKE) is a much-needed addition to the often self-centered historiography of Greek communism. The stated ambition of the book is not simply to tell the story of a national communist party but rather to provide "a history of international Communism from the perspective of its periphery in southeastern Europe" (p. 12) through the case study of the KKE. It does so successfully. (H-net)
Google Preview content