One of the great contradictions of the Soviet system was that its most terrifying moments of excess generated within itself its most exceptional periods of dynamism, while the latent humanism of the system pushed it towards stagnation and decline. The horrific force of Stalinism, under pressure from existential external threats, replicated in Russia the equivalent of the entire British 19th century in little more than a decade. The five year plans succeeded in stamping entire industries out of the ground and turned a country without electricity into one that produced enough tanks to push back Hitler’s blitzkrieg. This was followed by a reconstruction effort that turned thousands of square miles of depopulated wreckage into a space age superpower within another short decade.
The illegality and arbitrary violence of the Stalin era prompted a horrified backlash within the ruling echelons of the Soviet leadership themselves. The post-Stalin administration took great risks in dismantling the entire complex of forced labour and political terror that had aggregated since the 1930s, and initiated the regime’s final successful programme of internal reform and renewal. However, the radicalism which the system required to heal itself was met with intransigence and hostility by an exhausted generation of administrators. Many had witnessed and survived too much change and were unwilling to countenance any more. Conversely, the conspicuous failure of the reforms to go anywhere near far enough to fix the scale of the deformities within the system disappointed the aspirations of new, better educated generations of Soviet citizens.
Increasingly, the system which had turned a vast rural, semi-feudal empire into a modern industrial powerhouse transformed itself into a great engine of wastefulness, buying its citizens off with the promise of an easy, quiet life in exchange for their tacit consent. ‘We pretend to work and they pretend to pay us’ became the defining feature of the stagnation which set in during 1970s. Utilising cutting edge research and analysis, Moshe Lewin reveals that the Soviet leadership were often completely aware of the problems that beset them, but, having discarded the tools of mass coercion, were completely incapable of responding effectively. As the great machine of the planned economy began to wind down in the second half of the 20th century, the people operating it were unable to do anything other than manage its decline. The Soviet Union possessed vast reserves of resources in areas with no surplus labour to exploit them, while at the same time maintained huge levels of overstaffing and in areas with massive labour surpluses, leading to plummeting productivity.
The inefficient (from a capitalist perspective) elements of the system were an important part of the social safety blanket for the wider population. The de-facto welfarist elements of the productive system were therefore held firmly in place by the most conservative elements of the apparatus. These conservatives were often themselves former Stalinists who were happy to accept ossification as the price of stability and social peace. When the next wave of political reform finally came with perestroika in the mid 1980s, it lifted the lid not on the potential for violent revolution, but on the dead air a moribund social contract.
Moshe Lewin’s book is a detailed survey of the way in which the Soviet state actually functioned, constructed from detailed and original analysis of the Soviet archives. It is sharply critical of a system in which there was much to be critical of, but cautions against becoming carried away by ideological condemnation. Lewin shows the way in which the hand dealt to the Soviet apparatus constrained their every choice. He emphasises the incredible robustness of a regime built under such unfavourable conditions. The Soviet Century is therefore an incredibly ambitious effort at myth busting, challenging ideological assumptions about what the Soviet system apparently was, and forwarding exactingly researched exposition on what it actually was. In particular it shows how the state and social structure morphed and changed dramatically throughout its history, and rejects any historical approach which attempts to project the Stalinist period backwards to 1917 and forwards to 1991.
This book, however, presumes an extensive pre-existing knowledge of the history of the Russian Revolution, the Stalinist 1930s, the Second World War and the Cold War. Lewin sheds light on so many hitherto unknown aspects of the history, he simply doesn't bother to repeat such things as are already fairly common knowledge from a historians perspective - a problem if you are not a historian! A reader looking for a colourful ‘big picture’ description of the Soviet project may well find this book a boring, baffling history of Russian bureaucracy. The most intriguing and exciting elements of The Soviet Century will only be apparent to people with an already good knowledge of the Soviet century.
The dialectic identified by Lewin is between the Stalinist apparatus, which he considers fundamentally different from the original Bolshevik state, counterposed with the stop/start reformism of Khrushchev-Brezhnev-Andropov era, upon which ‘history weighed like a nightmare’. In terms of the actual text, this approach means that we find ourselves plunged into the hallucinatory world of High Stalinism from the outset, and only encounter any substantial analysis of Lenin and the founding of the Soviet state 300 or so pages into the book!
Also missing from The Soviet Century is any information at all on one of the most significant elements of the system’s history, i.e. its impact on the outside world and international relations. Of the revolutionary Comintern era in the time of European revolution, to the role the Soviet Union played in the anti-colonial revolutions of the 60s and 70s, we learn nothing. This is a history of the Soviet Union as it might have been seen through the eyes of an apparatchik in some Moscow ministry, not through the eyes of the outside world.
While Moshe Lewin’s The Soviet Century is an impressive scholarly intervention, it is not the epic, emotive history it appears to be. Approach with caution.