14. RGASPI F.558, Op.3, D.350. As Svetlana Lokhova points out, Stalin doodled Uchitel’
on a number of books. S. Lokhova, ‘Stalin’s Library’ in L. F. Gearon (ed.), The Routledge International Handbook of Universities, Security and Intelligence Studies, Routledge: London 2020 p.428.15. For example: E. Radzinsky, Stalin
, Hodder & Stoughton: London 1997 p.454. See further the negative comments of Boris Ilizarov on Radzinsky’s hypothesis in his Stalin, Ivan Groznyi i Drugie, Veche: Moscow 2019 p.28.16. RGASPI, F.558, Op.3, D.11. p.33 of the book for the marking.
17. O. Volobuev & S. Kuleshov, Ochishchenie: Istoriya i Perestroika
, Novosti: Moscow 1989 p.146.18. RGASPI, F.558, Op.3, D.167. The first person to cite the quoted text seems to have been B. Slavin, ‘Chelovek Absolyutnoi Vlasti: O Maloizvestnykh i Neizvestnykh Vystupleniyakh I. V. Stalina i Ego Zametkakh na Polyakh Knig’, Pravda
(21 December 1994).19. D. Rayfield, Stalin and His Hangmen
, Viking: London 2004 p.22. On the facing page is a photograph of the cited text.20. R. Service, Stalin: A Biography
, Macmillan: London 2004 p.342.21. S. Žižek, Less than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism
, Verso Books: London 2013. Žižek quotes this text in a number of his publications.22. J. Stalin, Works
, vol.6, Foreign Languages Publishing House: Moscow 1953 pp.54–66.23. See J. F. Matlock, An Index to the Collected Works of J. V. Stalin
, Johnson Reprint Corporation: New York 1971 pp.145–6.24. For example: Put’ k Leninu: Sobranie Vyderzhek iz Sochinenii V. I. Lenina
, vols 1–2, Voenizdat: Moscow 1924. RGASPI, F.558 Op.3, Dd.295–6.25. Leninskii Sbornik
, vols 2, 4, 13, Lenin Institute: Moscow-Leningrad 1924, 1925, 1930. RGASPI, F.558, Op.3, Dd.183–5.26. I. Baz’, Pochemu My Pobedili v Grazhdanskoi Voine
, Moscow 1930. RGASPI, F.558, Op.3, D.10.27. E. van Ree, The Political Thought of Joseph Stalin: A Study in Twentieth-Century Patriotism
, Routledge: London 2002 p.258; Ree, ‘Stalin and Marxism: A Research Note’.28. https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1938/05/17.htm
. I owe this reference to E. Dobrenko, Late Stalinism: The Aesthetics of Politics, Yale University Press: London & New Haven 2020 pp.362–3.29. Ibid., p.267. Stalin lifted the quote from his copy of The New Course
, which he read and marked in detail. The booklet was stamped as item 884 in his library. RGASPI, F.558, Op.11, D.1577. An English translation may be found here: https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1923/newcourse/index.htm. Accessed 4 August 2021.30. On the socialism in one country debate see E. van Ree, Boundaries of Utopia: Imagining Communism from Plato to Stalin
, Routledge: London 2015 chaps 14–15.31. Cited by van Ree, Political Thought
, n.64 pp.321–2.32. An English translation may be found here: https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1924/lessons/1924-les.pdf
.33. J. Stalin, Works
, vol.6, Foreign Languages Publishing House: Moscow 1953 pp.338–73.34. https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1918/hrr/index.htm
. Accessed 4 August 2021.35. RGASPI, F558, Op.3, D.362.
36. Ibid., D.318. Dmitry Volkogonov’s perception of Stalin’s marking of Smolensky’s book is completely different to mine: ‘underlined in those places which criticise his arch-enemy: “Trotsky is prickly and impatient”, he has “an imperious nature which loves to dominate”, “he loves political power”, “Trotsky is a political adventurist of genius”.’ (D. Volkogonov, Stalin: Triumph and Tragedy
, Phoenix Press: London 2000 pp.226–7).37. RGASPI, Op.3, D364. The book has Stalin’s library stamp and is numbered 898. The English translations of Trotsky’s text in what follows derive from https://www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1920/terrcomm/index.htm
.38. Stalin wrote the word without hyphenation.
39. RGASPI, F.558, Op.3, D.91.
40. Cited by Ree, The Political Thought of Joseph Stalin
p.306, n.57.41. Ibid., p.315 n.5.