Prof. Julie Hessler
Office:
McKenzie 351
Office hours: Tues. 10:15-11:30,
Thurs.
1:00 - 2:45 (or by appointment)
Telephone: 346-4857 (office); 302-9032 (home)
Email:
hessler@darkwing.uoregon.edu
History
407 [Seminar] STALINISM
Mondays, 3:00-5:00
Course description:
This seminar will explore the history and English-language
historiography of the Stalin era, a formative period in Russian, Soviet, and
contemporary European history. Like other
seminars, it has methodological as well as substantive aims; class discussions
and assignments will focus on the practice of writing history as well as on the
specific subject matter of assigned texts.
Library assignments:
The course is directed towards the production of an original 20-page
seminar paper, due the Wednesday of finals week. Towards that end, students need to
familiarize themselves with the sources available in the library. For the first few weeks, this course asks you
to spend two hours a week perusing a major primary source, then writing up an
informal 2-page response paper, due in class.
Response papers should address as many of the following questions as
possible: What was your source? If you have read only part of a bigger
source, which part? What range of topics
does this source address? For what kinds
of research topic could it be used? How
would you assess its reliability? What
questions does the source raise?
Paper proposals:
To do enough research for your paper, you need to start reasonably
early. This is one of the reasons for
the requirement that you turn in a formal proposal for your research paper on
Oct. 27. The other reason, of course, is
that you can get some feedback at an early stage as to whether your topic is
feasible and your approach sound. For
the proposal, try to formulate your topic in terms of a historical problem,
which is to say that you should frame it in the form of a question, but also
give some sense of why this question is interesting or significant, based on
the reading that you have already done.
In addition, you should try to give a sense of how you plan to go about
answering the question (your research strategy, and, if already possible, your
hypothesis or argument). Aim for roughly
two pages. You should also append to
your proposal a preliminary bibliography of at least eight items.
E-mail progress report:
There are neither meetings nor formal assignments in the week of
November 17. The purpose of this break
is to give you time to delve into your independent research; a 20-page seminar
paper should rest on significantly more than twice the research that you would
devote to an ordinary 10-page assignment.
Just to make sure that you stay on track, I would like to hear from you
by e-mail at least once during that week.
I’m not looking for anything formal (though correct grammar and
capitalization would be nice!) -- just a brief progress report that lets me
know what you’ve been doing. Specifically, can you tell me about one secondary
book and one primary source that have had an impact on your thinking, as well
as any changes that you are thinking of making to your proposal? Also, has your paper begun to take shape in
your mind? What are its major sections
going to be
Grading:
Much of your grade for this course rides on your seminar paper, but not
all! Attendance is mandatory. We meet formally only six times in the
quarter, so if you miss one session, your participation grade will drop
substantially. Missing two or more
sessions will mean an automatic F in the course. Because of the nature of this course (the
large amount of independent work and the need to get through the early material
quickly), I will not accept late papers on any assignments (library
assignments, proposals, rough drafts, peer comments, or final papers). In the case of rough drafts, failure to turn
one in on time means that you will not have the benefit of comments from me or
your peers. Even if it is still rough,
turn something in! Assuming that you
attend class, grades will be determined as follows:
20%
preparation for and participation in class discussion
20%
library assignments
5%
on-time submission of rough draft
5%
e-mail progress reports
5%
comments on assigned partner’s rough draft
45%
seminar paper
Required readings:
Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain
Moshe Lewin, The Making of the Soviet System
Lydia Chukovskaya, Sofia Petrovna
Jan T. Gross, Revolution from Abroad
Vladislav Zubok and Constantine
Pleshakov, Inside the Kremlin’s Cold War
Course packet
SYLLABUS
Mon.,
Sept. 29
Introduction; documentary film on the
life of J. V. Stalin
Mon., Oct. 6 Industrialization and urban life
Reading: Stephen Kotkin, Magnetic Mountain, pp. 1-237.
Note: To get through this
assignment, I strongly recommend that you skip the endnotes. Instead, just glance over them at some point
to see what kinds of sources Kotkin uses.
Library
assignment: Select two document
collections from the handout. What can
you learn about the Stalin period from them?
Response paper due in class.
Mon., Oct. 13 Collectivization, politics, and social change
Reading: Moshe Lewin, The Making of the Soviet System (New York: Pantheon, 1985) -- choose from among “Social
Crises and Political Structures in the USSR,” pp. 3-48 [1985]; “Leninism and
Bolshevism: The Test of History and
Power,” pp. 191-208 [1984]; “Society, State, and Ideology During the First
Five-Year Plan,” pp. 209-240 [1978]; “The Social Background of Stalinism,” pp.
258-285 [1977]; and “Grappling with Stalinism,” pp. 286-314 [1985].
J. Millar and
A. Nove, “A debate on collectivization:
Was Stalin really necessary?” (course packet).
Lynne Viola,
“Bab’i bunty and peasant women’s protest during collectivization,” (course
packet), pp. 213-30.
Library
assignment: Look at British and/or
American foreign service records from 1929-1934. What do they tell you about collectivization,
famine, rural life? What other topics
were the foreign services interested in at that time? Write a response paper.
Mon., Oct. 20 Terror and subjectivity
Readings: Lydia Chukovskaya, Sofia Petrovna
Robert W.
Thurston, “Fear and Belief in the USSR’s ‘Great Terror’: Response to Arrest, 1935-1939”; reply by
Robert Conquest, “What is Terror?”; rebuttal by Thurston (course packet).
Library
assignment: Peruse the Current Digest of the Soviet Press from
1949-1953 (translated newspaper articles from the Soviet Union).
Mon., Oct. 27
No class;
replaced by consultations to discuss individual research projects. Topic proposal and bibliography due by the
normal class period; see note on proposals.
Mon., Nov. 3 Conquest
Reading: Jan T. Gross, Revolution from Abroad
Mon., Nov. 10 Foreign affairs
Reading: Zubok and Pleshakov, Inside the Kremlin’s Cold War
Mon., Nov. 17
No class. See note on e-mail progress reports. Note:
I will be out of town at a conference on Nov. 20-23, hence unavailable
for consultation. If you want to talk
about your paper, make an appointment for Tuesday!
Mon., Nov. 24
No class, but rough drafts due by 12:00 p.m. Wednesday
in my office. Turn in two copies. Take your assigned partner’s paper and
prepare written comments.
Monday, Dec. 1
Peer reviews due by 5:00 p.m. in my office. Bring one copy for me and one for the author
of the paper. Meeting to discuss rough
drafts at the normal meeting time.
Final papers due 5:00 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 9.