Importance of the Russian Revolution
Miscellanea / / August 08, 2023
The Russian revolution was one of the most important events of the 20th century, an event that is on a par with the two world wars or the end of the Cold War. This event conditioned for better and for worse many of the phenomena that occurred in that century, generating different types of ideologies that had their counterpart in political actions very concrete. Today it may seem somewhat difficult to understand due to the historical distance, but the truth is is that putting it in context can make us understand a lot of the phenomena that even today affect us on a social level.
The Russian Revolution meant the passage of an organization policy from an absolutist type to a communist type organization. This means that there was a radical reformulation of the conditions in which the society it unfolded. Russia was organized like the ancient kingdoms of Europe, with a sovereign at the head of the country, a sovereign whose word was the law. This sovereign, the tsar, faced resistance due to social conditions prevailing at the beginning of the century, a fact that led him to treat the rebels harshly. Subsequently, with the entry of Russia into the First World War, resistance increased as a result of the negative effects that such an arduous conflict generated in society. Conditions worsened until finally a series of strikes culminated in a revolt that forced the tsar to abdicate. Given this circumstance, a
government provisional that had a conservative character, but meanwhile the agitation in the town continued to increase. It is important to consider that basic organizational units existed in the town, a fact that in practice meant parallel power. Ultimately, the situation was resolved with an overthrow of the formal power structure in favor of the peasant councils and Lenin as head of the new state.The Russian Revolution It gave rise to a communist state that would last for many years and that would expand its influence throughout the world, making many countries opt for its form of social organization. What calls the attention of this circumstance is that the events occurred in a different way from what was proclaimed from Marxism. Indeed, according to dialectical materialism, the revolution should first pass through a capitalist society, a society that would later give shape to a dictatorship of the proletariat; In this case, the dictatorship arrived without ever moving to a society where capital was the organizational premise.
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