Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Soviet Foreign Policy -- A Fundamentally “Tsarist” Approach. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page report
discusses the ways in which Soviet foreign policy during its “Communist period”
(1917-1991) can be seen as being related to Russia’s previous tsarist policies.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWsvtsar.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
resemble that of any other part of the Western or European world or a completely backward part of Europe. What the student working on this project should understand is that
it was neither. It was not about to become another England and it was not without art, culture, and social order. But what it was was a system moving toward
radical change. The Russian Revolution of 1905-1907 (and when it was resumed in 1917 -- the "real" revolution) serves to mark a place and point in time when an entirely
different framework of government would come into being. It should not be thought of as the last of the great European revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries but the
first of a new kind of revolution. Countless generations of Russians had only known tsarist rule. Therefore, the influence of that monarchy could not help but influence the revolutionaries and
reformers. From Russia to the Soviet Union As Russia "morphed" into the Soviet Union, numerous factors Shaped the new ideologies that were emerging. According to Shanin (1989), the concepts
that were fundamental to life in the ubiquitous Russian peasant commune would serve as a dramatic alteration of the collective consciousness of the revolutionaries and the new leaders and demonstrate
its usefulness in terms of serving as a format for class organization as well as the fountainhead of egalitarian ideology. Furthermore, it offered a collective way of thinking that helped
in organizing the revolution and designing and then implementing the structure of what would be the Soviet Union. Lenin and the other leaders developed a new strategy for a revolutionary
alliance (and government) of workers and peasants. In the decade between the "first" or the start of the revolution to 1917 offered V. I. Lenin the time and planning to
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