Stalin planned a five-year economic plan called collectivization and believed that under that plan, the USSR would industrialize, and become stronger than any nation in the West. Unfortunately, the USSR was made up mostly of poor peasants. Mostly, these peasants harvested crops using their hands and wooden plows. Therefore, to make the plan successful, he had to brings some changes in peasant way of harvesting crops and their lives. Stalin required two things from peasants: firstly, the peasants would have to pay heavy taxes to pay for his new factories and secondly, the peasants would have to produce more food for all of the new workers in the cities.…
I Believe that even though Russia agriculture contributed to a greater part of the economy then the industrial side of Russia did, the little progress and new innovation’s in the way the Russian’s farmed hindered the country, and meant they were started to fall behind the rest of the world, also geographical…
Over the 30 years of Joseph Stalin’s dictatorship, the estimated death toll ranged from 28 to 40 million people, whom died from a variety of things, such as famine, executions, and a very large war. Stalin assumed autocratic rule of the Soviet Union in 1924 following the death of Lenin. Stalin made a variety of reforms, but his main focus was on the economic issues that was occurring in the communist country at the time. Stalin made his economic reforms solely to make the most amount of money possibly, even if millions of people had to die. I completely contest to Stalin’s beliefs and ideas during this very controversial time in the USSR.…
Joseph Stalin was born into a peasant estate on December 18, 1878 to Vissarion and Ekaterina Stalin in Gori, Georgia. Little is known about Stalin’s father Vissarion, other than he became employed at a shoe factory when Stalin was about the age of ten; because he left his family when Stalin was still a child, Stalin had “very little to do with him” (Kuromiya 2) from that point forward. On the other hand, Ekaterina, Stalin’s mother was involved in her son’s life, trying to find lowly jobs, such as sewing, in order to support her poverty-stricken family. Kuromiya emphasizes not only Stalin’s economic struggles with living in poverty but also the minor physical deformities Stalin suffered with as a child, including blemishes from smallpox, a deformed…
In conclusion I think Stalin was important to history but he didn't do much good. He was an awful person but without him Russia wouldn't be what it is today. I don't think that his actions are made up with the “good” things he…
Stalin fought with the victors during WW2 but when the tides turned, he knew he had to change sides. Stalin knew the risks but he did what he had to to save the Motherland. Out of all countries who fought in world war two, Russia had the most casualties. One could argue that Stalin single handedly rose Russia up from the ashes of world war one. A good man has be stern in times of crisis, and Stalin made the tough choices so that others would not have to.…
Following Lenin’s death on 21st January 1924 there was a long struggle for power due to his failure to appoint a successor. Key candidates included victor Stalin as well as Trotsky, Bukharin, Zinoviev and Kamenev and there were several separate fights with constant changing of alliances and sides. Stalin, who was able to manipulate the party machine, use the weakness of opposition to his advantage be pragmatic with his policies and ideology and employ a certain element of luck was victorious and despite this array of methods he used, his manipulation of the party machine was key to his success in the leadership struggle as he was able to combine his devious personality and powerful positions in the party to emerge triumphant. Stalin’s ability…
How Lenin Paved The Way For Stalin’s Great Terror Throughout the history of the Soviet Union, there have been numerous leaders who would influence future leaders with their policies and actions. However, there has been no greater influence than Vladimir Lenin had on Joseph Stalin’s style of leadership.…
Lenin hoped for a troika to replace him and continue with his policies, however, Joseph Stalin became the undisputed ruler and instituted his own policies, which in turn, abolished Lenin’s plans for the Soviet Union. Although life in the USSR under both Lenin and Stalin did not achieve the Marxist dream of a communist society, Lenin’s society progressed further towards it.…
All in all Stalin was liked and disliked in many fashions. But, with his achievements Stalin became one of the best leaders in the modern…
Joseph Stalin’s Industrialization of the Country, 1928, represents his all-encompassing sweeping push to reform The Soviet Union into a country that would have the technological and industrial capabilities to play a large role in the international affairs of the world. As it occurred through some periods of Russia’s history, starting with Peter the Great’s push for urbanization, Stalin desired to transform the USSR from a “backwater” nation into a force that could be on-par with some of the most powerful nations of that age. The document, an excerpt from a larger collection of his works, demonstrates the total power of Stalin and the State that is being used to mold the country into a powerful force, despite the loss and toll on human life…
The economy in China and Russia nearly collapsed under communism and with starvation running rampant in Russia Lenin recognized the need for some capitalistic practices. Russia 's later leader Joseph Stalin was dedicated to undermine everything the…
Vladimir Lenin, founder of the Russian Communist Party, and the Bolsheviks believed that violent revolution was the only way to overturn the government and avoid further development of liberalism in Russia. The authoritarian bent in Lenin’s thinking only got stronger and the Soviet Union became a dictatorship with a ruling central government. In the years following the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924, Stalin rose to become the leader of…
The interwar years in Europe was the perfect environment for Communism, Fascism and Nazism to come to fruition, as a result of growing resentment and unhealed wounds from World War One. Dictators took power because of the failure of capitalistic and liberal ideologies. The rise of Communism, fascism and Nazism occurred under the respective leadership of Joseph Stalin, Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler. These individuals had differing approaches to accomplish their goals. But gist of their ideas is similar.…
Joseph Stalin started off as a decent leader, but then he got power-hungry and when people started to not comply with his rules and laws, he would have them killed… .This hunger for power and control eventually turned his leadership into more of a dictatorship. Once Stalin started to become more of a dictator, the whole union started to fall apart. The USSR/Soviet Union (whatever you want to call it), is almost as if it followed the script to Animal Farm, which is funny because Animal Farm was published 40 years before the Stalin…