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| | Bukharin |
 | | After Lenins death Bukharin became the leading theorist of the party and was chief of staff of the Bolshevik Party. |  | | In February 1988, fifty years after Bukharins execution as a traitor, the verdict was reversed and his name cleared by the Soviet Supreme Court. |  | | As a political radical Bukharin was frequently imprisoned and was exiled in 1911, during which timed he lived and worked in Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, and the United States. |
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http://econc10.bu.edu/economic_systems/Theory/Marxism/Soviet/Bukharin.htm
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| | Bukharin Intro to Philosophical Arabesques by Helena Sheehan |
 | | Bukharin was judicially exonerated of all criminal charges and restored to party membership in 1988. |  | | The sentence of death was passed on Bukharin as well as on Rykov, Yagoda and others, including Trotsky in absentia. |  | | For years, his widow and son had petitioned the party to clear him of criminal charges, to restore his name, to readmit him posthumously to the party. |
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http://www.comms.dcu.ie/sheehanh/bukharin.htm
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| | Maoist book reviews: Anna Larina, Nikolai Bukharin's widow |
 | | Indeed, Bukharin became the most steadfast supporter of the NEP in the party. |  | | "I recall also that Nikolai Ivanovich, from what he told me, admitted to Kamenev and Sokolnikov that they had been absolutely right at the Fourteenth Party Congress, in 1925, when they advised delegates not to reelect Stalin as gensek [general secretary]. |  | | One of the ongoing themes of the memoirs is that it is not possible that these "Old Guard" Bolshevik leaders could be guilty of all the charges brought against them. |
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http://www.etext.org/Politics/MIM/bookstore/books/ussr/larina.html
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| | Philosophical Arabesques by Nikolai Bukharin |
 | | For Bukharin, the process was to end with his confession before the Soviet court, facing the threat that his young family would be killed along with him if he did not. |  | | After the death of Lenin, Bukharin co-operated with Stalin for a time. |  | | The project constitutes a defense of the genuine legacy of Lenin's Marxism against the use of his memory to legitimate totalitarian power. |
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http://www.monthlyreview.org/philosophicalarabesques.htm
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| | Nikolai Bukharin on the Use of Individual Terror Against Stalin |
 | | What is remarkable about Jules Humbert-Droz’s last conversation with Bukharin held in early 1929, in which Bukharin indicates that his opposition group had taken the decision to utilize individual terror against Stalin, is that it emanates from a source which is sympathetic to Bukharin. |  | | Aside from the official party and state documentation it has been mentioned by L.M. Kaganovich in his conversations with Feliks Chuyev. |  | | Jules Humbert-Droz was not an ‘outsider’ but a Bukharin loyalist at the time of this conversation (he later joined the ranks of Swiss Social-Democracy). |
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http://revolutionarydemocracy.org/rdv8n1/bukharin.htm
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| | M-TH: Fw: "Bukharin's prison manuscripts prove Koestler wrong" |
 | | The most significant aspect of this memoir is > Bukharin's own life and feelings, not his connection to the revolutionary > movement. |  | | Petty squabbles of the school became > unendurable, and Ivan secures a position as tax assessor in Bessarabia. |  | | Bukharin marvelously recreates the atmosphere of his school. |
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http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism-thaxis/2000-February/016011.html
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| | Nikolay Bukharin |
 | | Found guilty Nikolai Bukharin was executed on 15th March, 1938. |  | | Bukharin may justly be regarded as the co-author of the doctrine. |  | | Bukharin became involved in politics during the 1905 Revolution and the following year joined the Bolsheviks. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSbukharin.htm
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| | How It All Began; The Prison Novel; Nikolai Bukharin |
 | | For his opposition, Bukharin paid with his freedom and his life. |  | | The novel is presented here along with the only surviving letter from Bukharin to his wife during his time in prison, an epistle filled with fear, longing, and hope for his family and his nation. |  | | It traces the development of Nikolai "Kolya" Petrov (closely modeled on Nikolai "Kolya" Bukharin) from his early childhood though to age fifteen. |
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http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023110/0231107307.HTM
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| | Swans Commentary: Nikolai Bukharin, "How it All Began," by Louis Proyect - lproy01 |
 | | As with the case of many of his contemporaries, Bukharin's father was cowed into submission by Czar Alexander the Third, who "kept tightening the fist of his gendarmerie." His only outlet was an occasional jibe at the Orthodox Church or unfocused complaints about the system: |  | | Between the time of his arrest on February 27, 1937 and until his execution on March 15, 1938, Nikolai Bukharin wrote prodigiously and against the ticking clock from within the bowels of Lubyanka Prison. |  | | Although Bukharin tried to make sure that his manuscripts would not be interpreted as a challenge to Stalin, who could (and did) wreak vengeance against his family, there is little doubt that the contempt directed toward the chinovniks implied criticism of the bureaucratized socialist state as well. |
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http://www.swans.com/library/art9/lproy01.html
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| | Find in a Library: Nikolai Bukharin : the last years |
 | | To find this item in a library, enter a postal code, state, province, or country in the field above. |  | | Find in a Library: Nikolai Bukharin : the last years |  | | WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries. |
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http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/e9cac04905c70037.html
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| | Swans Commentary: Nikolai Bukharin's "Philosophical Arabesques," by Louis Proyect - lproy33 |
 | | Bukharin was probably the best-known victim of these police state tactics after Trotsky, his erstwhile leftist opponent. |  | | Unlike Trotsky, Bukharin never had a movement created after his example. |  | | (Swans - January 30, 2006) Philosophical Arabesques is one of four books that Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin wrote in prison from the time of his arrest in February 1937 until his execution 13 months later. |
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http://www.swans.com/library/art12/lproy33.html
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| | Case of Nikolai Bukharin |
 | | Nikolai Bukharin, colleague and pupil of Lenin, editor of Isvestia, head of the Communist International and distinguished Marxist scholar, was shot after he had been compelled to confess to conspiring with Trotsky and others to bring about the downfall of the Revolution in which he had been so colorful a figure. |  | | Bukharin and his colleagues were the victims of the most cynical frame-up of the century. |  | | This book, written during the Cold War, shows how the basis of the indictment against Bukharin completely crumbled away, though the Soviet authorities refused to permit the reopening of the case. |
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http://www.coronetbooks.com/books/case2405.htm
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| | Nikolai Bukharin and Evgenii Preobrazhensky: The ABC of Communism |
 | | Shortly after he joined the editorial board of Pravda, and in 1920 he was elected to the secretariat of the party central committee. |  | | Played no significant part until he met Bukharin with whom he wrote The ABC of Communism as his first and only major work. |  | | After Lenin's death a signator of the "Declaration of the 46" which definitely made him a part of the opposition, though without any important position. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/bukharin/works/1920/abc
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| | Title page for ETD etd-09172005-111150 ( Browse Search ) All Available ETDs |
 | | This dissertation examines the claims that Nikolai Bukharin was an inconsistent Marxist theoretician, at times “un-Marxist” in his thinking who radically altered his political philosophy to justify his support for such different policies as War Communism and the New Economic Policy. |  | | This study also conclusively demonstrates that Bukharin was located within the heart of both Marxism and Bolshevism and did not move to the Right during the NEP. |  | | While one can still argue that Bukharin may have acted differently from Stalin once in power, this dissertation demonstrates that Bukharin was consistent in his theoretical work on the revolution and the transition to socialism. |
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http://etd.library.pitt.edu/ETD/available/etd-09172005-111150
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| | prison novel |
 | | As to the fifth manuscript, the unfinished autobiographical novel, Bukharin started working on it on November 12, 1937 and continued working till March 1938, till the time he was shot dead on March 15, 1938. |  | | The novel is presented along with the only surviving letter from Bukharin to his wife, Anna Mikhailovna Larina, during his time in prison. |  | | By the time he was arrested, Hitler and Mussolini were in power and the Spanish Civil War had begun. |
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http://www.seagullindia.com/index-books/prison2.html
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| | Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin — www.greenwood.com |
 | | Fifty years after his execution in Stalinist Russia, Bukharin has been rehabilated by the Communist Party and invoked as the intellectual antecedent of Gorbachev. |  | | The Bukharin Delegation on Science and Society: Action and Reaction in British Studies of Science Val Dusek |  | | This book is not currently available for purchase Online. |
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http://www.greenwood.com/catalog/C3261.aspx
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| | Nikolai - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This human name article is a disambiguation page — a list of pages that might otherwise share the same title, which is a person's or persons' name. |  | | Nikolai is a Russian variant of the masculine name Nicholas. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolai
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