Moshe Lewin

Historian Misha Lewin as he appeared in the middle 1980s.

Moshe "Misha" Lewin (pronounced "Luh-VENE," November 7, 1921 – August 14, 2010) was a scholar of Russian and Soviet history. Lewin was a major figure in the school of Soviet studies which emerged in the 1960s.

Biography

Early years

Moshe Lewin was born in 1921 in Wilno, Poland (now Vilnius, Lithuania), the son of ethnic Jewish parents who died in the Holocaust. Lewin lived in Poland for the first 20 years of his life, fleeing to the Soviet Union in June 1941 just ahead of the invading Nazi army.[1] For the next two years, Lewin worked as a collective farm worker and as a blast furnace operator in a metallurgical factory.[1]

In the summer of 1943, Lewin enlisted in the Soviet army. He was sent to officers' training school and was promoted on the last day of the war.[1]

In 1946, Lewin returned to Poland before emigrating to France. A believer in Labor Zionism from his youth, in 1951 Lewin emigrated again, this time to Israel, where he worked for a time on a kibbutz and as a journalist before eventually returning to school.[1] Lewin received his Bachelor of Arts from Tel Aviv University, in Israel in 1961.[2]

In 1961, Lewin received a research scholarship to study at the Sorbonne in Paris, where he studied the collectivization of Soviet agriculture.[3] In 1964, Lewin was awarded his Ph.D from the Sorbonne.[2]

Academic career

Newly credentialed with his doctorate degree, Lewin was named Director of Study at l'École des hautes études, Paris, where he served from 1965 to 1966.[2] During this time he converted his Sorbonne dissertation into a book manuscript, which was published in 1966 in French and translated into English in 1968 as Russian Peasants and Soviet Power.

This monograph dealt with the Soviet grain procurement crisis of 1928 and the associated political battle, a bitter fight which resulted in a decision to forcibly collectivize Soviet agriculture. In this work, Lewin emphasized collectivization as a practical (albeit extreme) solution to a real world problem facing the Soviet regime, one out of several potential solutions to a crisis situation. Rather than an inevitable and predestined action, collectivization was cast as a brutal manifestation of realpolitik — a view in marked contrast to the traditionalist historiography of the day. Russian Peasants and Soviet Power was initially projected as the first part of a long study of the social history of Soviet Russia down to 1934,[4] although the project seems to have been abandoned, perhaps as duplicative of the work of British historians E.H. Carr and R.W. Davies.

Lewin's other 1968 book, Lenin's Last Struggle, was an extended essay charting the evolution of Lenin's thinking about the growing bureaucracy of Soviet Russia. In it, Lewin additionally chronicled the politics of the post-Lenin succession struggle during the time of Lenin's final illness, emphasizing "lost" alternatives to the actual path of historical development. In this Lewin again presented a perspective which again stood in marked contrast to the voluminous writings of the totalitarianist school that dominated academia, which cast the USSR as a monolithic and fundamentally unchanging structure.

From 1967 to 1968, Lewin was a senior fellow at Columbia University in New York City.[2] Upon completion of his Columbia fellowship, Lewin took a post as a research professor at Birmingham University, England from 1968 until 1978.[2] During this interval he published Political Undercurrents in Soviet Economic Debates: From Bukharin to the Modern Reformers, which, along with the work of Princeton University professor Stephen F. Cohen, helped to restore the name and ideas of Nikolai Bukharin to the academic debate concerning the Soviet 1920s. Lewin noted that many of the same criticisms which Bukharin had leveled against Stalin during the political battles of 1928 and 1929 in the USSR were later "adopted by current reformers as their own," thereby adding a contemporary importance to the study of the historical past.[5]

After leaving Birmingham, Lewin returned to the United States, where he assumed a professorship at the University of Pennsylvania, where he remained until his retirement in 1995.[2]

Although regarded as a doyen of social history and a godfather of the so-called "revisionist" movement of young social historians who came to the fore in the field of Soviet studies during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s, Lewin's own work largely centered on the relationship between high politics and economic policy. One notable exception came with the publication in 1985 of a collection of Lewin's essays and lectures entitled The Making of the Soviet System. In this book, Lewin visited a number of key topics of social history such as rural social mores, popular religion, customary law in rural society, the social structure of the Russian peasantry, and social relations within Soviet industry. Lewin emerged as a critic of the politicized "What are they up to?" orientation of Soviet studies in favor of a more apolitical perspective attempting to answer the question "What makes the Russians tick?"[6]

Lewin's final works attempted to analyze the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and his brief efforts at top-down reform of the communist system and to put the rise and fall of Soviet communism into historical perspective. In his final book, The Soviet Century, published in 2005, Lewin argued that the political and economic system of the former Soviet Union constituted a sort of "bureaucratic absolutism" akin to the Prussian bureaucratic monarchy of the 18th Century which had "ceased to accomplish the task it had once been capable of performing" and therefore given way.[7]

Death and legacy

Moshe Lewin died August 14, 2010 in Paris.

In 1992, Lewin was honored with a Festschrift edited by historians Nick Lampert and Gabor Rittersporn entitled Stalinism: Its Nature and Aftermath: Essays in Honour of Moshe Lewin.[8] Contributors to the volume included economic historians Alec Nove and R.W. Davies as well as key social historians such as Lewis Siegelbaum and Ronald Grigor Suny, among others.

In the Lewin Festschrift, co-editor Lampert summarized Lewin's work in the following manner:

"The scope of Lewin's explorations has been very wide, dealing with a panorama of social classes and groups, with the lower depths of society as well as the bosses, with informal social norms as well as formal law, with popular religion as well as established ideology. The range of his intellectual debts is also broad, owing as much to Weber as to Marx, emphasising as much the power of ideologies and myths in human behaviour as the weight of economic structure. The key thing is the perception of society as a socio-cultural whole, though Lewin always remained open to new pathways that might appear in the course of research, always eclectic in the best sense, always eschewing the pursuit of a grand theory for all history — a pursuit which only leads you away from the rich canvas of concrete human experience."[3]

Lewin's papers are housed at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Nick Lampert, "Preface" to Nick Lampert and Gabor Rittersporn, Stalinism: Its Nature and Aftermath: Essays in Honour of Moshe Lewin. Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1992; pg. x.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kaiyi Chen, Finding Aid for the Moshe Lewin Papers, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1998.
  3. 1 2 Nick Lampert, "Preface," pg. xi.
  4. Moshe Lewin, "Author's Foreword" to Russian Peasants and Soviet Power: A Study of Collectivization. London: George Allen and Unwin, 1968; pg. 11.
  5. Moshe Lewin, "Introduction" to Political Undercurrents in Soviet Economic Debates: From Bukharin to the Modern Reformers. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1974; pg. xiii.
  6. Moshe Lewin, "Introduction" to The Making of the Soviet System: Essays in the Social History of Interwar Russia. New York: Pantheon, 1985; pp. 5-6.
  7. Moshe Lewin, The Soviet Century. London: Verso, 2005; pg. 383.
  8. Nick Lampert and Gabor Rittersporn, Stalinism: Its Nature and Aftermath: Essays in Honour of Moshe Lewin. Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1992. Published in the United States by M.E. Sharpe.

Works

External links

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