So the thing is that this author is a revisionist who believes that we can merely edit capitalism to achieve socialism (if the author even wants socialism). further, partly because the author is a biographer of stalin, he does too much idol worship of stalin's opinions & conflates them with socialist findings. Like to mention what is used to support revisionism the author mentions the relationships stalin had with warsaw pact countries that did not have a revolution but were merely liberation from the nazis by the USSR. while we could maybe argue from this book that stalin had thought there would be a different outcome with usa between 1945-1950, the gist is that the biographer... this book was literally reviewed by the WSJ & yet the biographer thinks himself a marxist theorhetician because he conflates Stalin's biography with socialist findings.
Besides that, I had been wondering for a while what the deal with Stalin's library was from the first time I heard about it when researching religion in the USSR. So this was exactly the sort of book I'd been wanting to read for a while, and among the cold war bullshit books my library's audiobook app had, this was a pretty decent choice. But it was still a bit cold war bullshit.
There's also a quote about war rape conflating rape with sleeping around. While I think I've heard of that quote before, there are at least 2 things that came to mind: I think based on how the book says the original press release regarding Stalin's wife's death by shooting didn't say whether it was by suicide, accident, or murder, I think it that speaks volumes to him shooter her dead. The clarification of it being suicide in the 1980s was probably in order to facilitate rehabilitation. I'm not sure why that rehabilitation was done & how it relates to Russian Nationalism, but that is a mood. Secondly, we have established that the czarist state was a settler colonial project.
I've also seen reviews attack the author for refusing to hold the USSR on the same level as Hitler & Nazi Germany, and to that I say the USAmerican bourgeoisie paid/invested in Nazi Germany's holocaust infrastructure. The USAmerican bourgeoisie paid Hayek to write "The Road To Serfdom" to conflate the Nazis with the USSR instead of the reality of USA backing the Nazis. To refute that shit, look up "the night of long knives". If you still conflate nazis with LGBTQIA+ people, then read "the pink triangle" by richard plant.
Besides that though, a thing we can definitely see with USSR being a fatal flaw is that it was built from a settler empire. We saw this try to get combatted with "the national question" & federalism instead of unitary system, but that would be like saying racism ended in 1965 as boomers raised under a mccarthyist state were misled to believe. Obviously USA then weaponized that against USSR during the cold war, but still. For another example, the Soviets had a lot of discourse about how to apply anti-classism to other fields of study, but they hadn't yet approached it towards pedagogy like we say start to be done circa the 1960s. The USSR had been experimenting with new ways to raise kids for a socialist society instead of a capitalist one, but I'm not sure of those outcomes. Point being, I'm not quite sure how European scholars dealt with it when they still had a lot of racism, but when we look at the anti-racism in USA due to settler colonialism instead of extractivist colonialism, I think there's been more progress made in USA about these sorts of topics. Anyways, that was what was going through my mind as the book recounts how Stalin directed pedagogy. However, to put it more charitably, Stalin was more of a listener than a creative mind, so like with any official, if they were saying it or doing it then there were people behind them with that.
The author kind of touches upon this, and in fact, I would argue that the lens of seeing Stalin as a student was to answer a similar question of how did our elders/previous generations get it wrong, such as in the book "Locking Up Our Own" by James Forman Jr. I've recently started reading "Braiding Sweetgrass" & Robin Wall Kimmerer made a point about needing political solidarity being taught by how nut-trees all release their nuts at the same time when talking about going from the commons to private property. (she mentions a specific council, "the council of pecans" i think, and based on how she relays/summarizes it the people who studied USA's constitution didn't pick up on the Eminent Domain clause.) But seriously that example given by Kimmerer is a good example of how shopping commercials combined with then selling utility bonds due to cash flow problems meant that "The Washington Consensus" was Catatroika (we had similar events happen in USA history too). But while the usage of Stalin as an intellectual (partly to speak to how "evil" is banal) in order to connect with students who are anti-revisionist was an interesting move, the author still praises revisionism himself. So while the biographer did a good job at having a materialist analysis in evaluating Stalin's life, he does this in the hope of using idol worship to support revisionists if not outright capitalists.
Since I hear Stalin & Obama get called token representation used to refute racial chauvinism in racial supremacist societies, I feel the urge to say something like: he's not my hero, i'm a communiust you idiot (hi Ash Sarkar!). But bluntly, "idiot" implies that the author's misdirection was a mistake, like hon, there's an entire club that makes money off this shit. Beyond that, the discussion of fiction works in Stalin's library did bring up pop culture & celebrity culture references I am still unfamiliar with (I listened to the audiobook & so I still need to get ahold of the citations), and it would've been really interesting to explore that angle of fame, because people act like celebrity culture isn't a subset of hero worship & that in addition to that umbrella there's politics etc. Like, IDK how else to explain when people complain about Stalin trying to be modest as a celeb rity in what's supposed to be a socialist society, that this isn't exclusive to the realm of politicians.
I also want to put into the hat too as I've gone over why the biographer is an unreliable narrator (though more reliable than is the norm in a McCarthyist USA), that jobs such as at capitalist/bourgeois institutions (let alone media outlets) cannot speak against their employers' interests. Social media is used by employers to montior employees. Social media is still full of fascist bullshit.
So basically this book is 1 star. especially due to its attempt to mislead its readers into being complicit with fascist, but I added a star because it's an uncommon, but rather interesting topic. If access to Stalins annotated books were ever digitized for easier accessibility, & or if an anti-revisionist were do like take the basic prompt of this book & redo it, then I would/will put this back down to 1 star. Until then, it's 2 stars.
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elaboration on social media being fascist
While I could get into how this means researchers are at odds with intellectual property holders (especially ones who fund the means of research), I think a more articulate example is that Twitter & Facebook are used by employers to monitor their employees to the point that like how religion/churches were used socially in the early & mid 1900s (to the point that Judy Garland saying that going to church doesn't make you a good person was an uncommon opinion in her era & how circa the 2010s people not having facebook or twitter are considered suspicious) & yet the GOP & conservatives are not censored/deplatformed in USA. Even though Twitter was like their algorithms couldn't tell the difference between Nazis & GOP people (to be even clearer, Twitter had to make algorithms for France & Germany that do ban nazis because in those countries it's considered obstructing an investigation/of justice. So when people talk about when will the last holocaust perpetrator be investigated/tried, they're basically asking when can people be openly nazi again (which is daunting considering how commonplace supporting the nazis during the holocaust was even if they only got 30-40% of the vote in 1932.)