Proletarian Revolution (journal)

Proletarian Revolution (Пролетарская революция) was a Soviet historical journal published in Moscow from 1921 to 1941.[1][2] In a review of the first issue, Ilya Vardin reported the journal as declaring "Our goal is precisely to help the writing of the history of the proletarian revolution in Russia. Nobody will read documentary raw materials, except the historians themselves, and we need books that would be read by both workers and students."[3]

Proletarian Revolution
LanguageRussian
Publication details
History1921-1941
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Prolet. Revolut.
Indexing
LCCN48042157
OCLC no.7013012

Istpart period

From 1921 to 1928 it was published by Istpart, the History of the Party Department, a commission originally founded by the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks).[4]

Lenin Institute period

From 1928 to 1931 it was published by the Lenin Institute.[4]

In 1931, Stalin sent a letter, "Some Questions Concerning the History of Bolshevism" to the magazine sharply criticizing the published article by Anatoly Slutsky, "The Bolsheviks on German Social Democracy in the Period of its Pre-War Crisis", describing it as anti-party and half-Trotskyist . In turn, this letter was also published in the journal.[4]

Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute period

From 1933 to 1941 by the Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute.[4]

References

Further reading

  • Пролетарская революция: Систематический и алфавитный указатель. 1917—1929. (Proletarian Revolution: A Systematic and Alphabetical Index. 1917-1929. State Publishing House, 1930.


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