Since the moderatorial issue of moving prior OT threads did not resolve itself, I thought it would be appropriate to put the collected references in one single thread.
Stas Bush wrote:
Stephen Kotkin: Magnetic Mountain, Stalinism as a Civilization
Contrary to what the header of this Google book says in the page itself this is not "Steeltown, USSR", but a much more interesting study - a study of the birth of the great Soviet industrial city - the famous "Magnitka" - in Stalin's times, done with the use of much archival evidence and rigorous analysis (apparently Kotkin did a lot of work collecting all this data and facts in the perestroika times in Magnitogorsk).
Suffice to say it's simply brilliant as it only territorially takes a microcosm of the country-wide industrialization but depicts both larger Soviet phenomena through this single city history and the everyday life of individual citizens in that small city - both a micro- and macroview. It is an indictment of the bureaucracy of Stalin's rule and the creation of a "Party quasi-religion", and also a realistic depiction of everyday life, worker competitions, and the ever-looming competition between Soviet power structures. The depiction of how the general population was involved in the purges, how the rationalization of the purges ran through the entire bureaucracy, how being a communist put you under greater risk of being purged due to increased surveillance and the administrative tasks; the book carefully deduces the disastrous effects on Soviet bureaucracy and the Soviet people in general that Stalin's "cultism" had, and how the Soviet administrative appartus turned against the countrymen, factory administrators and even it's own "apparatchiki" people.
It's a story about industry, people and power.
I can't recommend a better study whether you're left, right or center. In my view this is the best work on Stalinism, Soviet industrialization and 1930s Soviet life, so far produced.
Stas Bush wrote:
John Scott, Behind the Urals: An American Worker in Russia's City of Steel
Another book, with Kotkin writing the preface. Another very good account but this time it's a contemporary memorial (especially important as it was written in 1942 (first edition) to 1944-1945 (expanded), and the actual being of Scott in the USSR was from 1931 to 1939/
Wikipedia wrote:John Scott (1912-1976), was an American writer who worked in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) during World War II. The OSS was the predecessor organization to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Scott was alleged to be working for Soviet intelligence.
Scott was the son of conservationist and peace activist Scott Nearing. Scott migrated to the Soviet Union in 1932 and worked for many years in Magnitogorsk. Scott married Mariya Ivanovna Dikareva and the two came to the United States in 1942. [Stas Bush - Scott loved Masha quite a lot apparently - he dedicated his book to her]
Scott wrote Behind the Urals: An American Worker in Russia's City of Steel about his experiences in Magnitogorsk, presenting the Stalinist enterprise of building a huge steel producing plant and city as an awe-inspiring triumph of collectivism.
Scott also wrote about the painful human price of industrial accidents, overwork, and the inefficiency of the hyperindustrialization program, the wretched condition of peasants driven from the land in the collectivization program and forced into becoming industrial laborers, and the harshness of the ideological purges.
These experiences, however, did not disillusion him with Soviet communism. Scott indicated he shared a belief with the Soviet people that “it was worthwhile to shed blood, sweat, and tears’’ to lay “the foundations for a new society farther along the road of human progress than anything in the West; a society which would guarantee its people not only personal freedom but absolute economic security.”
Whittaker Chambers claims Scott tried to influence Time Magazine publisher Henry Luce to remove Chambers as foreign news editor because of Chambers' anti-communist and anti-Soviet views.
Reportedly, Scott was identified as an agent by the Venona project by NSA/FBI analysts, under the code name "Ivanov".
Venona
John Scott is allegedly referenced in the following Venona project decrypts:
* 726–729 KGB New York to Moscow, 22 May 1942
* 1681 KGB New York to Moscow, 13 October 1943
* 207 KGB Moscow to New York, 8 March 1945
Stas Bush wrote:Another set of very good works by Robert C. Allen of a leading north American economic department, of the University of British Columbia, Canada.
The Standard of Living in the Soviet Union, 1928-1940
A Multi-Sector Simulation Model of Soviet Economic Development
Capital Accumulation, the Soft Budget Constraint and Soviet Industrialization
The following works laid the groundwork for Allen's massive monography on the Soviet industrialization:
Robert C. Allen. Farm to Factory: A Reinterpretation of the Soviet Industrial Revolution (2003)
Both deep, investigating the industrial disparities and the pace of individual events, and very broad, giving a comparison of economic and industrial devleopment in the USSR and other world countries, First, Second and Third World.
Some interesting graphs and tables from the book:
Urbanization
USSR comp.to other world
USSR comp.to Latn America
USSR comp.to East Asia
USSR comp.to Europe/offshoots
Soviet consumption in 1928-40
Agricultural marketings, 1913, 1928 and 1937
Peasant's Consumption of Agricultural Output
Heavy industry: targets and their fulfillment
Light industry: targets and their fulfillment
GDP growth by sector
Calorie consumption per citizen per day in Russia and USSR, 1900-2000
Soon to follow: a few Soviet War Industry posts and some more about Soviet industrial objects which I haven't mentioned beforeStas Bush wrote:Yet another good work about Soviet industrialization.
By Angus Maddison, Emeritus Professor, Faculty of Economics, University of Groningen.
USSR: Assessing the Performance of a Communist Economy, a lot of analysis of CIA economic models of the USSR, etc.
Check his page out, it has very good macroeconomic works based on solid stats, on such subjects as: Economic and Social Impact of Colonial Rule in India, Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run and such.