By Lars T. Lih. The publication of To the Masses brings to a triumphant climax one of the epic scholarly ventures of our time: John Riddell’s series entitled The Communist International in Lenin’s Time. The first volume in the series appeared in 1985 and the seventh final volume in 2015 – over 5,500 pages in all that cover the tumultuous period from 1907 to 1922. In these books we hear the authentic voice of a revolutionary epoch, as activists from all over the globe talk, fight, speechify, and search together for the elusive path to socialist revolution.
When I purchased the second volume – The German Revolution and the Debate on Soviet Power – the store clerk told me that although it was a documentary collection, it reads like a cliffhanger novel. He was right.
To the Masses presents the proceedings of the 1921 Congress (owing to the vagaries of publishing, this penultimate volume is the last to be made available). The Comintern faces a new and even existential challenge, since revolutions in Western Europe are no longer on the immediate agenda. What is the future role of an institution that was created to function specifically in the now receding era of revolutions?
To the Masses exhibits all the qualities that mark the other entries in the series – qualities that turn what is potentially a daunting reading experience (a 1,300-page record of congress proceedings!) into something gripping and dramatic. First, like they say, you can’t tell the players without a scorecard – and Riddell provides a scorecard in the form of a superb scholarly apparatus that lets us know who everybody is and what their political agendas are. Next, he provides a guide to the main debates of the congress, traces their roots in the past, and explains why they were important for the future. Finally, he proposes an interpretation of the historical significance of the congress and its contemporary relevance that orients our reading, even if we end up disagreeing with him.
To the Masses also has some unique features – in particular, a series of appendices that reveals the infighting over the German question by means of previously unpublished and fascinating documents. The clashing agendas of the top Russian leaders – most prominently, Lenin, Trotsky, Zinoviev, Radek, and Bukharin – are displayed as never before, along with the reaction of German, Italian and other communists, who were by no means passive pawns awaiting orders. The challenge to prevailing stereotypes contained in the appendices will take a long time to assimilate fully.
Congratulations to John Riddell and the Historical Materialism Book Series for a volume that will fascinate anyone interested not only in the history, but also in the human feel and the continuing relevance, of the great revolutionary era – a volume that will rapidly become an oft-quoted and oft-analyzed standard source.
For more information and reviewer comments on the books discussed here see ‘To the Masses’, ‘Toward the United Front’, and ‘The Communist International in Lenin’s Time’.