The long and winding road
trajectories to peace and socialism in contemporary Soviet ideology
pp. 203-224
Abstract
"Peace" and 'socialism" are the twin core values of Soviet ideology.1 World socialism was for Lenin the absolute value, and efficacy in advancing it the yardstick of all policy. Among relative values, subsidiary to socialism, in the Bolshevik outlook, peace soon came to occupy first place. Following early disillusionment with the strategy of revolutionary war, it was established as axiomatic that avoiding involvement in large-scale war was essential to the security of the Soviet state and to the cause of which that state was the bastion. This goal motivated both the search for collective security in the 1930s and the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939–41. The experience of the Nazi invasion, of course, confirmed its vital importance.
Publication details
Published in:
White Stephen K, Pravda Alex (1988) Ideology and Soviet politics. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 203-224
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-19335-6_10
Full citation:
Shenfield Stephen (1988) „The long and winding road: trajectories to peace and socialism in contemporary Soviet ideology“, In: S.K. White & A. Pravda (eds.), Ideology and Soviet politics, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 203–224.