HIST 327: The Soviet Union and Russia Since World War II

HIST 327-001: Soviet Union and Russia since WWII
(Spring 2019)

10:30 AM to 11:45 AM TR

East Building 122

Section Information for Spring 2019

From 1945-1991, the Soviet Union was one of two major world superpowers, the U.S. “enemy” in the Cold War. Since 1991, Russia collapsed and reemerged as a powerful player in world politics. Fourteen other independent states appeared on world maps with the Soviet collapse. They have followed similar but not identical trajectories since that time. In order to understand the fifteen countries that were once part of the Soviet Union and to understand the post-Cold War world, we must understand late Soviet history. This course explores the history of the Soviet Union from the bloody rule of Joseph Stalin during World War II through the collapse of communism in 1991, and studies the Russia that emerged through its difficult "transition" to capitalism and the rise of Vladimir Putin. The course covers the creation of a distinctive and violent form of state and society called Stalinism, the attempts to reform the system through the renunciation of mass terror under Nikita Khrushchev until his removal in a “palace coup,” the stagnation/stability of the Leonid Brezhnev years, and Mikhail Gorbachev's final effort to reform communism that destroyed the Soviet Union. The post-Soviet years saw the radical recreation of every sphere of life, but also mass crime, corruption, an economic collapse as severe as the Great Depression, before recovery and return to international importance.

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Course Information from the University Catalog

Credits: 3

Analyzes the Soviet Union, the Cold War "enemy" of the United States, from victory in World War II under Joseph Stalin through collapse in 1991. Studies the fifteen independent countries that emerged from the Soviet collapse, including Russia, the Baltic States, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Central Asia, and the Caucasus, which continue to influence world politics and culture today. Limited to three attempts.
Specialized Designation: Non-Western Culture
Schedule Type: Lecture
Grading:
This course is graded on the Undergraduate Regular scale.

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