The Russian Revolution of 1917 thrilled millions around the world and showed that socialism was possible.
Sandra Bloodworth brings to life the struggle between February and October of the working class and the soldiers (peasants in uniform) for land, bread and peace. She shows how the vast mass of working people learnt, through their own struggles, that if they did not definitively defeat the capitalist class the only alternative was counter-revolution and military dictatorship. there would be no end to the war, no bread for starving families, or land for the peasantry without soviet rule. She also faces the counter-revolution that overtook the first workers state in history.
In spite of the ultimate tragedy that befell the revolution, the creativity and organisational genius of working people, their striving for human dignity and liberation from class rule, are as inspiring today as then.
Sandra Bloodworth gives a comprehensive overview of the revolution, giving insight into details usually overlooked in histories of these important events. Using many quotes from contemporary workers, politicians, revolutionaries and journalists, Bloodworth paints a vivid picture of workers self-organizing at the center of the revolution: working women organizing a general strike which kicked off the February Revolution; workers taking control of every factory and every social service so that the October Revolution became nothing more than a formality of kicking out the Provisional Government and recognizing the authority of the Workers Councils; and workers organizing new systems of equality after the revolution such as abortion on demand, free childcare, free access to contraceptions, communal kitchens, and much much more. Quotes from Lenin and Trotsky as they guide the revolution and the revolutionary fervor of the masses show how important a skilled and prepared revolutionary party is - contrasted with the brilliant but unprepared Communist Party of Germany in the 1918 revolution there.
The tragedy of Stalins rise to power and the mutation from Socialism to State Capitalism is also deftly covered. The foundation that was laid for this tragedy to occur, including the sabotage of Russian industry by capitalists, and the economic forces rising from the civil war and the failure of the German Revolution are laid out clearly.
This book is essential reading for anyone who's understanding of the Russian Revolution is, like mine was, based entirely on the film Anastasia and therefore included far more evil wizards than ever actually existed.
Brilliant read. Not intent on reading Trotsky's 'History' just yet but intent on learning about what went on in the Russian Revolution (without the blatant corruption of the Revolution taught in high school), Sandra Bloodworth's 'How Worker's Took Power: The 1917 Russian Revolution' is the perfect introduction to the unforgettable struggle of the proletariat in the economically and politically backward czarist Russia. For anyone wishing to learn the uncompromising truth behind the revolution of 1917 I could not recommend a better book.