- Docente: Vanessa Voisin
- Credits: 6
- SSD: M-STO/03
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in History (cod. 0962)
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from Sep 15, 2025 to Oct 22, 2025
Learning outcomes
By the end of the course students will know and be able to apply the main methods of analysis to cultural and historical processes in Russia over the modern and contemporary eras, whether in the specific geo-historical context or through interaction with other complex cultural worlds. They will be able to place political, religious and cultural phenomena in historical context, critically examining the interconnections (including comparison with other cultural areas), and use specific cases to illustrate various aspects of the encounter among different cultures. They will be able to recognise and analyse the documentary and textual sources relevant to the areas in question. They will know how to listen, understand and debate respectfully with different cultures and viewpoints, spotting tie-ups among the different disciplines involved in interpreting cultural and historical phenomena.
Course contents
The course aims to provide the most up-to-date knowledge of the political and social history of the Russian empire/USSR/Russian Federation in the 20th century up to the beginning of V. Putin's presidency. The emphasis is put on periods considered key ones, such as 1905-1921, 1928-33, 1953-62, 1985-91 and on the main dynamics of the system. It is strongly recommend to read the brief history of the Soviet Union listed in the bibliography (S. Fitzpatrick) to get a systematic overview of the 20th century.
*The first three classes explain the content and structure of the course, including the methodology for critical analysis of historical sources (the Russian/Soviet case). We will proceed with a critical analysis of the Petition of the Workers of St. Petersburg of January 9 (22), 1905, and the memoirs of Menshevik activist Vera Aleksandrova, which provide an opportunity to present the situation of the Russian Empire at the beginning of the 20th century, the concept of autocracy, and the three Russian revolutions.
*Lessons 4-6 consist of lectures, but with the study of historiographical debates and recent theses on the period 1905-1932, and we will continue to study primary sources.
*Lessons 7-15 alternate between group discussions (starting with very short presentations by students) and lectures on the years 1930-2000.
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Readings/Bibliography
Some readings are mandatory before specific lectures to enable critical study of sources and discussion; they are indicated in the space "Virtuale" del corso and are the basis of the final written exam of the attending students. Non-attending students will work on monographs indicated below (in the section "Assessment methods").
Non mandatory readings: To allow for classroom discussion, it is essential that students with no previous experience in Russian and Soviet history read at least an overview of 20th- and 21st-century Russian history before the start of the course, or at least the second week of the course. Sheila Fitzpatrick is recommended (her book was originally published in English The Shortest History of the Soviet Union, Columbia University Press, 2022), as well as Mark Edele, The Soviet Union. A Short History (Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, 2019). Note that the latter author recently published a historiographical study on Stalinism: Mark Edele, Debates on Stalinism (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020) and a concise story of his area of specialization Mark Edele, Stalinism at War: The Soviet Union in World War II (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2021).
To delve into the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in particular, one can study Cigliano, Giovanna. La Russia contemporanea : un profilo storico, 1855-2005. Roma: Carocci, various prints (2005, 2013, 2023). But for an elaborate view of the entire chronological span 1850-1991, I shall rather recommend Graziosi, Andrea. L’Unione Sovietica, 1914-1991. Bologna: Il Mulino, 2011 (exists in ebook format obtainable through AlmaRe) This is the most comprehensive summary work on the Soviet period, and contains reflections on historiography up to 2010. French historian Nicolas Werth has also written a general history of the Soviet Union, which is regularly updated (some editions have been translated into Italian).
The more recent period is concisely studied in Benvenuti, Francesco. Russia oggi. Roma: Carocci, 2013 (fro 1985 to 2010) and in De Stefano, Carolina. Storia del potere russo. Dagli zar a Putin. Brescia: Morcelliana, 2022 (from 1985 to 2022).
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Teaching methods
Classes are based on active exchange between students and the instructor.
Several classes are built around a primary source (textual or visual) that all students must read and reflect on before class.
Through the study of texts and documents and the main concepts for academic knowledge of contemporary Russian and Soviet history, methods of critical analysis of primary sources will also be addressed. During the lessons, students are expected to acquire or improve their skills in historical methodology. All attending students must enrol, within the second week of the course, in groups that will present brief analyses of a historical source in one of the dedicated lessons.
Group registration at this link: ……
DETAILED CALENDAR
Lessons 1, 2, 3 (Mon. 15, Tue. 16, Wed. 17 Sept. ) Presentation of course methods and study of a) the St. Petersburg Workers' Petition of January 9 (22), 1905; b) the concept of autocracy; c) the memoirs of Menshevik Vera Aleksandrova
Lesson 4 (Mon. Sept. 22) Russian imperialism: stages and dynamics, academic interpretations.
Lesson 5 (Tues. Sept. 23). The Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917, an episode in the “continuum of crisis” (Peter Holquist)
Lesson 6 (Wed. Sept. 24). From the dream of global revolution to the ‘revolution from above’ (1918-1932)
Lesson 7 (Mon 29 Sept). Collectivisation and state violence. Work on primary sources: documents taken from Graziosi, Andrea (ed.), La grande guerra contadina in Urss. Bolsheviks and Peasants (1918-1933), Rome, Officina Libraria, 2022, pp. and by Nicolas Werth, The Island of Cannibals. Siberia, 1933: a story of horror within the gulag archipelago, translated by Francesco Roncacci, Milan, Corbaccio, 2007.
Lesson 8 (Tues. Sept. 30). Stalinism in the 1930s.
Lesson 9 (Wed. Oct. 1). World War II in the USSR. Work on primary sources: excerpts from Vasily Grossman, A Writer in War, 1941-1945, Milan, Adelphi, 2015.
Lesson 10 (Mon. Oct. 13). The Khrushchev Thaw. Work on primary sources: excerpts from Nikita Khrushchev's “secret report.”
Lesson 11 (Tues. Oct. 14). The Brezhnev Years 1. Work on primary sources: dissidents and political repression.
Lesson 12 (Wed, Oct 15). The Brezhnev years 2. Work on primary sources: excerpts from S. Aleksievic, Secondhand Time
Lesson 13 (Mon, Oct 20). Gorbachev's perestroika. Work on primary sources (collection of various documents).
Lesson 14 (Tue, Oct 21): From hope to crisis, 1991 and 1993. Work on primary sources: White House, August 1991 and October 1993.
Lesson 15 (Wed, Oct 22): The beginning of the Putin era. Work on primary sources: Text by A. Politkovskaya, 2004.
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Assessment methods
- ATTENDING STUDENTS
To be considered attending, students must be participate in the work of a group. They must enrol here
(link to come)
Those enrolled should contact each other to discuss their presentation together.
Each student's grade is based on general class participation and a 2-hour written exam after the end of the 15 lectures. The test consists of answering 3 questions about the content seen during the classes: the primary sources studied together, reports of the content seen in each class (professor's powerpoint presentations), and any academic texts given to prepare on the page Virtuale of the course. Questions are open, redacted answers are expected. The evaluation criteria are: accuracy and precision of the answer, choice of appropriate vocabulary, ability to link concrete aspects and facts with broader notions that have been studied in the classroom.
- NON-ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students who cannot attend class regularly are anyway welcome to come when they can. The course grade will result from a 4-hour written exam after the end of the 15 lectures. The test consists of answering 6 open-ended questions on the content of the 2 books chosen (see below)
Study list:
1/A general and concise overview of the contemporary age in Russia/Urss.
Fitzpatrick, Sheila. Breve Storia Dell’Unione Sovietica. Milano: Bompani, 2023. (the book exists in English)
2/ a monograph to be chosen between these 2:
- Liudmila G. Novikova, La controrivoluzione in provincia : movimento bianco e guerra civile nella Russia del Nord, 1917-1920, Roma, Viella, 2015 (the book exists in English)
This is a thorough monograph, based on a broad archival base and fueled by the latest historiographical insights into civil wars, war cultures and extreme violence. It offers an original look at the nexus of "1917 revolutions and the Russian Civil War," from the vantage point of a little-studied area in which counterrevolution exhibited special characteristics (General Miller).
- Riccardo Mario Cucciolla, La repubblica del cotone. Le evoluzioni dell’Uzbekistan sovietico tra inclusione e crisi imperiale (Rome: Viella, 2024).
Cotton has characterized the development of industrialization and global capitalism, transforming rural societies, the environment, and imperial relations. The recent history of Uzbekistan, the main non-Slavic republic of the USSR, is linked to this raw material: the political, economic, social, and cultural relations between Moscow and Tashkent were based on cotton production, in their peculiarities, in a system that included the periphery but reproduced, under other banners, many dynamics of the previous colonial regime. But at what price? Alternating between external interference and periods of greater autonomy, the ‘cotton republic’ remained actively included in and heavily dependent on the Soviet system until 1991, when independence, however unwelcome, became inevitable.
For attending and non-attending students, there are six exam sessions: early November, early December, early/mid-January, late May, late June, and early November.
The syllabus to be studied changes every year; non-attending students in debt should study the year's syllabus given in the exam call.
Students who, for reasons related to disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), may use compensatory or dispensatory tools must first contact the appropriate office in good time: https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/it/per-studenti. The office will propose any necessary adjustments to the students concerned, which must in any case be submitted 15 days in advance for approval by the teacher, who will assess their appropriateness in relation to the educational objectives of the course.
ASSESSMENT POLICY
Each answer in the written examination may be awarded a maximum of points indicated for each question. The total for all answers corresponds to a maximum of 30 points (if the clarity and richness of the answers are particularly high, it may receive 30L) If the student has demonstrated active participation in classrooms, the overall total for the examination may be increased by 1 to 4 points
The following will then be assessed:
- The mastery of the content
- The ability to synthesize and analyze themes and concepts
- The ability to express oneself adequately and in language appropriate to the subject matter
The highest mark will be awarded to the student who shows a general understanding of the topics discussed in the literature to be studied, an assimilation of the most important knowledge, a critical approach to the material and sources and a confident and effective use of appropriate terminology.
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Teaching tools
During the lectures, the professor will make extensive use of power point presentations.
After the lectures, powerpoint files and other texts will be uploaded to the teaching materials section of the site for students to download and learn.
Other tools will be made available in the teaching materials section of the site, such as lists of original terms and abbreviations with their translation.
Students who require specific services and adaptations to teaching activities due to a disability or specific learning disorders (SLD), must first contact the appropriate office: https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en/for-students.
Office hours
See the website of Vanessa Voisin