fbpx
Wikipedia

Sheila Fitzpatrick

Sheila Mary Fitzpatrick (born June 4, 1941) is an Australian historian, whose main subjects are history of the Soviet Union and history of modern Russia, especially the Stalin era and the Great Purges, of which she proposes a "history from below", and is part of the "revisionist school" of Communist historiography. She has also critically reviewed the concept of totalitarianism and highlighted the differences between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in debates about comparison of Nazism and Stalinism.

Sheila Fitzpatrick
Born (1941-06-04) 4 June 1941 (age 82)
NationalityAustralian
CitizenshipAustralian, American
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne
St Antony's College, Oxford
London School of Slavonic and East European Studies
Occupation(s)Historian, academic
Known forWorks on the history of modern Russia, the history of Soviet Union, and the Stalinist period
Writing career
GenreHistory
SubjectSoviet Union
Literary movementPeople's history
Notable worksBeyond Totalitarianism
Everyday Stalinism
Stalin's Peasants
Notable awardsMellon Foundation Award
RelativesBrian Fitzpatrick
Website
sydney.edu.au/arts/history/staff/profiles/sheila.fitzpatrick.php

Fitzpatrick is professor at the Australian Catholic University (Melbourne), honorary professor at the University of Sydney, and Distinguished Service Professor Emerita at the University of Chicago. Prior to this, she was Bernadotte Everly Schmitt Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago, where she taught Soviet history, for which she is considered a founder of the field.

Family edit

Sheila Fitzpatrick was born in Melbourne in 1941, the daughter of Australian author Brian Fitzpatrick and his second wife Dorothy Mary Davies.[1] Her younger brother was the historian David P. B. Fitzpatrick.

Fitzpatrick's first marriage to Alex Bruce, a fellow University of Melbourne student, soon ended. Her second marriage to the political scientist Jerry F. Hough, from 1975 to 1983, ended in divorce. While living in the United States, Fitzpatrick married the theoretical physicist Michael Danos (1922-1999).[2]

Biography edit

Fitzpatrick attended the University of Melbourne (BA, 1961) and received her doctorate from St Antony's College, Oxford (1969), with a thesis entitled The Commissariat of Education under Lunacharsky (1917–1921). She was a Research Fellow at the London School of Slavonic and East European Studies from 1969 to 1972.[3]

Fitzpatrick is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She is a past president of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies and the American Association for Slavic and Eastern European Studies. In 2002, she received an award from the Mellon Foundation for her academic work. From September 1996 to December 2006, Fitzpatrick was co-editor of The Journal of Modern History with John W. Boyer and Jan E. Goldstein. In 2012, Fitzpatrick received both the award for Distinguished Contributions to Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies from the Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies, and the American Historical Association's award for Scholarly Distinction,[4] the highest honour awarded in historical studies in the United States.[5] In 2016, Fitzpatrick won the Prime Minister's Award for non-fiction for her book On Stalin's Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics (2015).[6]

She spent fifty years living outside Australia. This included periods in Britain, the Soviet Union,[5] and twenty years in the United States, before moving back to Australia in 2012.[7] She won the 2012 Magarey Medal for biography for her memoir My Father's Daughter: Memories of an Australian Childhood.[8] A second volume of her memoirs A Spy in the Archives was published in 2013. In 2017, Fitzpatrick published a memoir-biography of her late husband Michael Danos, Mischka's War: A European Odyssey of the 1940s, which was short-listed for the Prime Minister's Award for non-fiction in 2018.[9] In addition to her research, she plays the violin in orchestras and chamber music groups.[5]

Fitzpatrick has been awarded Discovery Grants by the Australian Research Council for joint projects in 2010 with Stephen G. Wheatcroft for Rethinking the History of Soviet Stalinism, in 2013 with Mark Edele for War and Displacement: From the Soviet Union to Australia in the Wake of the Second World War, and in 2016 with Ruth Balint and Jayne Persian for Postwar Russian Displaced Persons arriving in Australia via the China Route.[5] Since her return to Australia, in addition to continuing her research and writing on Soviet history, such as On Stalin's Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics,[10][11] Fitzpatrick has been working and publishing on Australian immigration, particularly displaced persons after World War II and during the Cold War,[7] such as White Russians, Red Peril: A Cold War History of Migration to Australia.[12][13][14]

Research edit

Writing in The American Historical Review, Roberta T. Manning reviewed Fitzpatrick's work, stating: "In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Sheila Fitzpatrick almost singlehandedly created the field of Soviet social history with an impressive series of pioneering, now classic studies: The Cultural Revolution in Russia, 1928–1931 (1978), Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union, 1921–1934 (1979), and The Russian Revolution (1982). Book after book opened entirely new areas of research, explored old subjects from new perspectives, and forever altered the way experts perceived the USSR between 1917 and the outbreak of World War II."[15]

Her research focuses on the social and cultural history of the Stalinist period, particularly on aspects of social identity and daily life, and the social and cultural changes in Soviet Russia of the 1950s and 1960s. In her early works, she focused on the theme of social mobility, suggesting that the opportunity for the working class to rise socially and as a new elite had been instrumental in legitimizing the regime during the Stalinist period.[16][17][18] Despite its brutality, Stalinism as a political culture would have achieved the goals of a democratic revolution. The center of attention was always focused on the victims of the purges rather than its beneficiaries, as thousands of workers and communists who had access to the technical colleges during the first five-year plan received promotions to positions in industry, government, and the leadership of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) as a consequence of the Great Purge.[19] For Fitzpatrick, the "cultural revolution" of the late 1920s and the purges which shook the scientific, literary, artistic, and the industrial communities is explained in part by a class struggle against executives and intellectual bourgeois. The men who rose in the 1930s played an active role to get rid of former leaders who blocked their own promotion, and the Great Turn found its origins in initiatives from the bottom rather than the decisions of the summit.[20] In this vision, Stalinist policy was based on social forces and offered a response to popular radicalism, which allowed the existence of a partial consensus between the regime and society in the 1930s.[19]

In Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared, Fitzpatrick and Michael Geyer disputed the concept of totalitarianism, stating that it entered political discourse first as a term of self-description by the Italian Fascists and was only later used as a framework to compare Nazi Germany with the Soviet Union, which were not as monolithic or as ideology-driven as they seemed. Without calling them "totalitarian", they identified their common features, including genocide, an all-powerful party, a charismatic leader, and pervasive invasion of privacy; however, they stated that Nazism and Stalinism did not represent a new and unique type of government but rather can be placed in the broader context of the turn to dictatorship in Europe in the interwar period. The reason they appear extraordinary is because they were the "most prominent, most hard-headed, and most violent" of the European dictatorships of the 20th century. They stated they are comparable because of their "shock and awe" and sheer ruthlessness but underneath superficial similarities were fundamentally different, and "when it comes to one-on-one comparison, the two societies and regimes may as well have hailed from different worlds."[21]

Historiographical debates edit

Academic Sovietology after World War II and during the Cold War was dominated by the "totalitarian model" of the Soviet Union,[22] stressing the absolute nature of Joseph Stalin's power.[23] The "revisionist school" beginning in the 1960s focused on relatively autonomous institutions which might influence policy at the higher level.[24] Matt Lenoe described the "revisionist school" as representing those who "insisted that the old image of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state bent on world domination was oversimplified or just plain wrong. They tended to be interested in social history and to argue that the Communist Party leadership had had to adjust to social forces."[25] Fitzpatrick was one of a number of "revisionist school" historians who challenged the traditional approach to Soviet history, as outlined by political scientist Carl Joachim Friedrich, which stated that the Soviet Union was a totalitarian system, with the personality cult, and almost unlimited powers of the "great leader" such as Stalin.[26][27]

As the leader of the second generation of the "revisionist school", or "revisionist historians", Fitzpatrick was the first to call the group of historians working on Soviet history in the 1980s "a new cohort of [revisionist school] historians." Fitzpatrick called for a social history that did not address political issues and adhered strictly to a "from below" viewpoint. This was justified by the idea that the university had been strongly conditioned to see everything through the prism of the state, hence "the social processes unrelated to the intervention of the state is virtually absent from the literature."[28] Fitzpatrick did not deny that the state's role in social change of the 1930s was huge and defended the practice of social history "without politics", as most young "revisionist school" historians did not want to separate the social history of the Soviet Union from the evolution of the political system.[19] Fitzpatrick explained that in the 1980s, when the "totalitarian model" was still widely used, "it was very useful to show that the model had an inherent bias and it did not explain everything about Soviet society. Now, whereas a new generation of academics considers sometimes as self evident that the totalitarian model was completely erroneous and harmful, it is perhaps more useful to show than there were certain things about the Soviet company that it explained very well."[29]

Bibliography edit

Books edit

  • The Commissariat of Enlightenment : Soviet organization of education and the arts under Lunacharsky, 1917–1921. Cambridge University Press. 1970.[30]
  • Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union, 1921–1932. Cambridge University Press. 1979 1st ed.; paperback ed. 2002.
  • The Russian Revolution. Oxford University Press. 1st ed. 1982; 2nd revised ed. 1994; 3rd revised ed. 2007. ISBN 978-0-19-923767-8. Translated into Braille, Czech, Italian, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.
  • The Cultural Front. Power and Culture in Revolutionary Russia. Cornell University Press. 1992.
  • Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. Oxford University Press. 1st ed. 1994; paperback ed. 1996. Translated into Russian.
  • Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. Oxford University Press. 1st ed. 1999; paperback ed. 2000. ISBN 0-19-505001-0 Translated into Czech, French, Polish, Russian, and Spanish.
  • Tear Off the Masks! Identity and Imposture in Twentieth-Century Russia. Princeton University Press. 2005. Translated into Chinese and Russian.
  • My Father's Daughter. Melbourne University Publishing. 2010. ISBN 9780522857474. OCLC 506020660.
  • A Spy in the Archives. Melbourne University Press. 2013. Translated into Turkish.
  • On Stalin's Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics. Princeton University Press. 1st ed. 2015; paperback ed. 2017. Translated into Czech, French, German, Greek, Polish, Russian, and Spanish.
  • Mischka's War: A European Odyssey of the 1940s. Melbourne University Press & I. B. Tauris. 2017.
  • White Russians, Red Peril: A Cold War History of Migration to Australia. La Trobe University Press. 2021.
  • The Shortest History of the Soviet Union. Old Street Publishing. 2022

Articles edit

  • "Ascribing Class: The Construction of Social Identity in Soviet Russia" (1993). The Journal of Modern History. 65: (4). JSTOR 2124540.
  • "Vengeance and Ressentiment in the Russian Revolution" (2001). French Historical Studies. 24: (4). doi:10.1215/00161071-24-4-579.
  • "Politics as Practice: Thoughts on a New Soviet Political History" (2004). Kritika. 5: (1). doi:10.1353/kri.2004.0009.
  • "Happiness and Toska: A Study of Emotions in 1930s Russia" (2004). Australian Journal of Politics and History. 50: (3). doi:10.1111/j.1467-8497.2004.00339.x.
  • "Social Parasites: How Tramps, Idle Youth, and Busy Entrepreneurs Impeded the Soviet March to Communism" (2006). Cahiers du monde russe et soviétique. 47: 1–2. JSTOR 20175002.
  • "The Soviet Union in the Twenty-First Century" (2007). Journal of European Studies. 37: (1). doi:10.1177/0047244107074186.
  • "A Spy in the Archives" (2010). London Review of Books. 32 (23): 3–8.

Book reviews edit

Year Review article Work(s) reviewed
2014 Fitzpatrick, Sheila (September 2014). "'One of Us': The Spy Who Relished Deception". Australian Book Review. 364: 27–28. Macintyre, Ben (2014). A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781408851739.
2020 Fitzpatrick, Sheila (6 February 2020). "Which Face? Emigrés on the Make". London Review of Books. 42 (3): 7–9. Tromly, Benjamin (2019). Cold War Exiles and the CIA: Plotting to Free Russia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198840404.
Reddaway, Peter (2020). The Dissidents: A Memoir of Working with the Resistance in Russia, 1960–90. Brookings Institution. ISBN 9780815737735.
2020 Fitzpatrick, Sheila (10 September 2020). "Whatever Made Him". London Review of Books. 42 (17): 9–11. Wagner, Izabela (2020). Bauman: A Biography. Polity. ISBN 9781509526864.
2021 Fitzpatrick, Sheila (January–February 2021). "Knotty problems : an examination of Europe's displaced persons". Australian Book Review. 428: 12, 14. Nasaw, David (2020). The last million : Europe's displaced persons from World War to Cold War. Allen Lane.

References edit

  1. ^ "Fitzpatrick, Brian Charles (1905–1965)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  2. ^ "Fitzpatrick, Sheila Mary - Woman - the Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia".
  3. ^ Reports of the President and of the Treasurer. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. 1987. p. 34.
  4. ^ "Award for Scholarly Distinction Recipients". Historians.org. American Historical Association. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d "Fitzpatrick, Sheila Mary (1941 – )". The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia. University of Melbourne (The Australian Women's Register). Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  6. ^ "On Stalin's Team: the Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics". Office for the Arts, Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications. 7 November 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  7. ^ a b "Professor Sheila Fitzpatrick". University of Sydney. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  8. ^ "Magarey Medal – Previous Winners". The Australian Historical Association. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  9. ^ "2018 shortlists announced!". Office for the Arts, Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  10. ^ Legvold, Robert (May–June 2016). "On Stalin's Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  11. ^ Whitewood, Peter (4 March 2017). "On Stalin's Team: The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics, written by Sheila Fitzpatrick". Brill. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  12. ^ "White Russians, Red Peril". Australian Catholic University. 15 April 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021. Making use of newly discovered Russian-language archives and drawing on a lifetime's study of Soviet history and politics, Professor Fitzpatrick examines the early years of a diverse Russian-Australian community and how Australian and Soviet intelligence agencies attempted to track and influence them. While anti-communist 'White' Russians dreamed a war of liberation would overthrow the Soviet regime, a dissident minority admired its achievements and thought of returning home.
  13. ^ Macintyre, Stuart (May 2021). "A complex mosaic: The early years of a diverse Russian-Australian community". Australian Book Review. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  14. ^ Beddie, Francesca (1 June 2021). "White Russians, Red Peril: A Cold War History of Migration to Australia by Sheila Fitzpatrick". Historians.org. American Historical Association. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  15. ^ Manning, Roberta T. (2000). "Reviewed Work: Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times; Soviet Russia in the 1930s by Sheila Fitzpatrick". The American Historical Review. 105 (5): 1839. doi:10.2307/2652201. JSTOR 2652201.
  16. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (1979). Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union, 1921–1934. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511523595. ISBN 9780511523595.
  17. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (September 1979). "Stalin and the Making of a New Elite, 1928–1939". Slavic Review. 38 (3): pp. 377–402. doi:10.2307/2496711. At p. 38.
  18. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (Spring 1984). "The Russian Revolution and Social Mobility: A Reexamination of the Question of Social Support for the Soviet Regime in the 1920s and 1930s". Politics and Society. 13 (2): 119–141. doi:10.1177/003232928401300201. At p. 13.
  19. ^ a b c Karlsson, Klas-Göran (2008). "Revisionism". In Karlsson, Klas-Göran; Schoenhals, Michael. Crimes Against Humanity Under Communist Regimes – Research Review. Stockholm: Forum for Living History. pp. 29–33. ISBN 9789197748728.
  20. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila, ed. (1978). Cultural Revolution in Russia, 1928–1931. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253203373.
  21. ^ Geyer, Michael; Fitzpatrick, Sheila (2009). Beyond Totalitarianism: Stalinism and Nazism Compared. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3–4, 8–12, 17–19. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511802652. ISBN 978-0-521-72397-8.
  22. ^ Davies, Sarah; Harris, James (8 September 2005). "Joseph Stalin: Power and Ideas". Stalin: A New History. Cambridge University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-139-44663-1. Academic Sovietology, a child of the early Cold War, was dominated by the 'totalitarian model' of Soviet politics. Until the 1960s it was almost impossible to advance any other interpretation, in the USA at least.
  23. ^ Davies, Sarah; Harris, James (8 September 2005). "Joseph Stalin: Power and Ideas". Stalin: A New History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-1-139-44663-1. In 1953, Carl Friedrich characterised totalitarian systems in terms of five points: an official ideology, control of weapons and of media, use of terror, and a single mass party, 'usually under a single leader'. There was of course an assumption that the leader was critical to the workings of totalitarianism: at the apex of a monolithic, centralised, and hierarchical system, it was he who issued the orders which were fulfilled unquestioningly by his subordinates.
  24. ^ Davies, Sarah; Harris, James (8 September 2005). "Joseph Stalin: Power and Ideas". Stalin: A New History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-1-139-44663-1. Tucker's work stressed the absolute nature of Stalin's power, an assumption which was increasingly challenged by later revisionist historians. In his Origins of the Great Purges, Arch Getty argued that the Soviet political system was chaotic, that institutions often escaped the control of the centre, and that Stalin's leadership consisted to a considerable extent in responding, on an ad hoc basis, to political crises as they arose. Getty's work was influenced by political science of the 1960s onwards, which, in a critique of the totalitarian model, began to consider the possibility that relatively autonomous bureaucratic institutions might have had some influence on policy-making at the highest level.
  25. ^ Lenoe, Matt (2002). "Did Stalin Kill Kirov and Does It Matter?". The Journal of Modern History. 74 (2): 352–380. doi:10.1086/343411. ISSN 0022-2801. S2CID 142829949.
  26. ^ Davies, Sarah; Harris, James (8 September 2005). Stalin: A New History. Cambridge University Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-1-139-44663-1.
  27. ^ Sheila, Fitzpatrick (2007). "Revisionism in Soviet History". History and Theory. 46 (4): 77–91. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2303.2007.00429.x. ISSN 1468-2303. ... the Western scholars who in the 1990s and 2000s were most active in scouring the new archives for data on Soviet repression were revisionists (always 'archive rats') such as Arch Getty and Lynne Viola.
  28. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (October 1986). "New Perspectives on Stalinism". The Russian Review. 45 (4): 357–373. JSTOR 130466. Quotes at pp. 358–359.
  29. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (October 1986). "Afterword: Revisionism Revisited". The Russian Review. 45 (4): 409–413. JSTOR 130471. Quotes at pp. 409–410.
  30. ^ Translated into Italian and Spanish.

Further reading edit

  • Hessler, Julie. "Sheila Fitzpatrick: An Interpretive Essay". Writing the Stalin Era: Sheila Fitzpatric and Soviet Historiography. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 21–36.
  • Suny, Ronald Grigor (2011). "Writing Russia: The Work of Sheila Fitzpatrick". In Alexopoulos, Golfo; Hessler, Julie; Tomoff, Kiril (eds.). Writing the Stalin Era: Sheila Fitzpatric and Soviet Historiography. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–20.

External links edit

  • Carnig, Jennifer; Harmes, William; Koppes, Steve. "Five faculty members elected as fellows of American academy". The University of Chicago Chronicle. 24 (17).
  • David-Fox, Michael; et al. (2007). "An Interview with Sheila Fitzpatrick". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. 8(3): 479–486. doi:10.1353/kri.2007.0034.
  • Harms, William (8 June 1995). "Graduate Teaching Award".
  • Harms, William (5 December 2002). "Fitzpatrick one of five distinguished scholars to receive Mellon grant".
  • University of Chicago. The University of Chicago Chronicle. 14 (19).
  • University of Sydney. The University of Chicago Chronicle. 22 (5).
  • ABC Conversations – Sheila Fitzpatrick on working inside a secret Soviet 60s society.

sheila, fitzpatrick, sheila, mary, fitzpatrick, born, june, 1941, australian, historian, whose, main, subjects, history, soviet, union, history, modern, russia, especially, stalin, great, purges, which, proposes, history, from, below, part, revisionist, school. Sheila Mary Fitzpatrick born June 4 1941 is an Australian historian whose main subjects are history of the Soviet Union and history of modern Russia especially the Stalin era and the Great Purges of which she proposes a history from below and is part of the revisionist school of Communist historiography She has also critically reviewed the concept of totalitarianism and highlighted the differences between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in debates about comparison of Nazism and Stalinism Sheila FitzpatrickBorn 1941 06 04 4 June 1941 age 82 Melbourne AustraliaNationalityAustralianCitizenshipAustralian AmericanAlma materUniversity of MelbourneSt Antony s College OxfordLondon School of Slavonic and East European StudiesOccupation s Historian academicKnown forWorks on the history of modern Russia the history of Soviet Union and the Stalinist periodWriting careerGenreHistorySubjectSoviet UnionLiterary movementPeople s historyNotable worksBeyond TotalitarianismEveryday StalinismStalin s PeasantsNotable awardsMellon Foundation AwardRelativesBrian FitzpatrickWebsitesydney wbr edu wbr au wbr arts wbr history wbr staff wbr profiles wbr sheila wbr fitzpatrick wbr phpFitzpatrick is professor at the Australian Catholic University Melbourne honorary professor at the University of Sydney and Distinguished Service Professor Emerita at the University of Chicago Prior to this she was Bernadotte Everly Schmitt Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago where she taught Soviet history for which she is considered a founder of the field Contents 1 Family 2 Biography 3 Research 4 Historiographical debates 5 Bibliography 5 1 Books 5 2 Articles 5 3 Book reviews 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksFamily editSheila Fitzpatrick was born in Melbourne in 1941 the daughter of Australian author Brian Fitzpatrick and his second wife Dorothy Mary Davies 1 Her younger brother was the historian David P B Fitzpatrick Fitzpatrick s first marriage to Alex Bruce a fellow University of Melbourne student soon ended Her second marriage to the political scientist Jerry F Hough from 1975 to 1983 ended in divorce While living in the United States Fitzpatrick married the theoretical physicist Michael Danos 1922 1999 2 Biography editFitzpatrick attended the University of Melbourne BA 1961 and received her doctorate from St Antony s College Oxford 1969 with a thesis entitled The Commissariat of Education under Lunacharsky 1917 1921 She was a Research Fellow at the London School of Slavonic and East European Studies from 1969 to 1972 3 Fitzpatrick is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Australian Academy of the Humanities She is a past president of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies and the American Association for Slavic and Eastern European Studies In 2002 she received an award from the Mellon Foundation for her academic work From September 1996 to December 2006 Fitzpatrick was co editor of The Journal of Modern History with John W Boyer and Jan E Goldstein In 2012 Fitzpatrick received both the award for Distinguished Contributions to Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies from the Association for Slavic East European and Eurasian Studies and the American Historical Association s award for Scholarly Distinction 4 the highest honour awarded in historical studies in the United States 5 In 2016 Fitzpatrick won the Prime Minister s Award for non fiction for her book On Stalin s Team The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics 2015 6 She spent fifty years living outside Australia This included periods in Britain the Soviet Union 5 and twenty years in the United States before moving back to Australia in 2012 7 She won the 2012 Magarey Medal for biography for her memoir My Father s Daughter Memories of an Australian Childhood 8 A second volume of her memoirs A Spy in the Archives was published in 2013 In 2017 Fitzpatrick published a memoir biography of her late husband Michael Danos Mischka s War A European Odyssey of the 1940s which was short listed for the Prime Minister s Award for non fiction in 2018 9 In addition to her research she plays the violin in orchestras and chamber music groups 5 Fitzpatrick has been awarded Discovery Grants by the Australian Research Council for joint projects in 2010 with Stephen G Wheatcroft for Rethinking the History of Soviet Stalinism in 2013 with Mark Edele for War and Displacement From the Soviet Union to Australia in the Wake of the Second World War and in 2016 with Ruth Balint and Jayne Persian for Postwar Russian Displaced Persons arriving in Australia via the China Route 5 Since her return to Australia in addition to continuing her research and writing on Soviet history such as On Stalin s Team The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics 10 11 Fitzpatrick has been working and publishing on Australian immigration particularly displaced persons after World War II and during the Cold War 7 such as White Russians Red Peril A Cold War History of Migration to Australia 12 13 14 Research editWriting in The American Historical Review Roberta T Manning reviewed Fitzpatrick s work stating In the late 1970s and early 1980s Sheila Fitzpatrick almost singlehandedly created the field of Soviet social history with an impressive series of pioneering now classic studies The Cultural Revolution in Russia 1928 1931 1978 Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union 1921 1934 1979 and The Russian Revolution 1982 Book after book opened entirely new areas of research explored old subjects from new perspectives and forever altered the way experts perceived the USSR between 1917 and the outbreak of World War II 15 Her research focuses on the social and cultural history of the Stalinist period particularly on aspects of social identity and daily life and the social and cultural changes in Soviet Russia of the 1950s and 1960s In her early works she focused on the theme of social mobility suggesting that the opportunity for the working class to rise socially and as a new elite had been instrumental in legitimizing the regime during the Stalinist period 16 17 18 Despite its brutality Stalinism as a political culture would have achieved the goals of a democratic revolution The center of attention was always focused on the victims of the purges rather than its beneficiaries as thousands of workers and communists who had access to the technical colleges during the first five year plan received promotions to positions in industry government and the leadership of the All Union Communist Party Bolsheviks as a consequence of the Great Purge 19 For Fitzpatrick the cultural revolution of the late 1920s and the purges which shook the scientific literary artistic and the industrial communities is explained in part by a class struggle against executives and intellectual bourgeois The men who rose in the 1930s played an active role to get rid of former leaders who blocked their own promotion and the Great Turn found its origins in initiatives from the bottom rather than the decisions of the summit 20 In this vision Stalinist policy was based on social forces and offered a response to popular radicalism which allowed the existence of a partial consensus between the regime and society in the 1930s 19 In Beyond Totalitarianism Stalinism and Nazism Compared Fitzpatrick and Michael Geyer disputed the concept of totalitarianism stating that it entered political discourse first as a term of self description by the Italian Fascists and was only later used as a framework to compare Nazi Germany with the Soviet Union which were not as monolithic or as ideology driven as they seemed Without calling them totalitarian they identified their common features including genocide an all powerful party a charismatic leader and pervasive invasion of privacy however they stated that Nazism and Stalinism did not represent a new and unique type of government but rather can be placed in the broader context of the turn to dictatorship in Europe in the interwar period The reason they appear extraordinary is because they were the most prominent most hard headed and most violent of the European dictatorships of the 20th century They stated they are comparable because of their shock and awe and sheer ruthlessness but underneath superficial similarities were fundamentally different and when it comes to one on one comparison the two societies and regimes may as well have hailed from different worlds 21 Historiographical debates editAcademic Sovietology after World War II and during the Cold War was dominated by the totalitarian model of the Soviet Union 22 stressing the absolute nature of Joseph Stalin s power 23 The revisionist school beginning in the 1960s focused on relatively autonomous institutions which might influence policy at the higher level 24 Matt Lenoe described the revisionist school as representing those who insisted that the old image of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian state bent on world domination was oversimplified or just plain wrong They tended to be interested in social history and to argue that the Communist Party leadership had had to adjust to social forces 25 Fitzpatrick was one of a number of revisionist school historians who challenged the traditional approach to Soviet history as outlined by political scientist Carl Joachim Friedrich which stated that the Soviet Union was a totalitarian system with the personality cult and almost unlimited powers of the great leader such as Stalin 26 27 As the leader of the second generation of the revisionist school or revisionist historians Fitzpatrick was the first to call the group of historians working on Soviet history in the 1980s a new cohort of revisionist school historians Fitzpatrick called for a social history that did not address political issues and adhered strictly to a from below viewpoint This was justified by the idea that the university had been strongly conditioned to see everything through the prism of the state hence the social processes unrelated to the intervention of the state is virtually absent from the literature 28 Fitzpatrick did not deny that the state s role in social change of the 1930s was huge and defended the practice of social history without politics as most young revisionist school historians did not want to separate the social history of the Soviet Union from the evolution of the political system 19 Fitzpatrick explained that in the 1980s when the totalitarian model was still widely used it was very useful to show that the model had an inherent bias and it did not explain everything about Soviet society Now whereas a new generation of academics considers sometimes as self evident that the totalitarian model was completely erroneous and harmful it is perhaps more useful to show than there were certain things about the Soviet company that it explained very well 29 Bibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2017 Books edit The Commissariat of Enlightenment Soviet organization of education and the arts under Lunacharsky 1917 1921 Cambridge University Press 1970 30 Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union 1921 1932 Cambridge University Press 1979 1st ed paperback ed 2002 The Russian Revolution Oxford University Press 1st ed 1982 2nd revised ed 1994 3rd revised ed 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 923767 8 Translated into Braille Czech Italian Korean Polish Portuguese Russian and Spanish The Cultural Front Power and Culture in Revolutionary Russia Cornell University Press 1992 Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization Oxford University Press 1st ed 1994 paperback ed 1996 Translated into Russian Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s Oxford University Press 1st ed 1999 paperback ed 2000 ISBN 0 19 505001 0 Translated into Czech French Polish Russian and Spanish Tear Off the Masks Identity and Imposture in Twentieth Century Russia Princeton University Press 2005 Translated into Chinese and Russian My Father s Daughter Melbourne University Publishing 2010 ISBN 9780522857474 OCLC 506020660 A Spy in the Archives Melbourne University Press 2013 Translated into Turkish On Stalin s Team The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics Princeton University Press 1st ed 2015 paperback ed 2017 Translated into Czech French German Greek Polish Russian and Spanish Mischka s War A European Odyssey of the 1940s Melbourne University Press amp I B Tauris 2017 White Russians Red Peril A Cold War History of Migration to Australia La Trobe University Press 2021 The Shortest History of the Soviet Union Old Street Publishing 2022Articles edit Ascribing Class The Construction of Social Identity in Soviet Russia 1993 The Journal of Modern History 65 4 JSTOR 2124540 Vengeance and Ressentiment in the Russian Revolution 2001 French Historical Studies 24 4 doi 10 1215 00161071 24 4 579 Politics as Practice Thoughts on a New Soviet Political History 2004 Kritika 5 1 doi 10 1353 kri 2004 0009 Happiness and Toska A Study of Emotions in 1930s Russia 2004 Australian Journal of Politics and History 50 3 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8497 2004 00339 x Social Parasites How Tramps Idle Youth and Busy Entrepreneurs Impeded the Soviet March to Communism 2006 Cahiers du monde russe et sovietique 47 1 2 JSTOR 20175002 The Soviet Union in the Twenty First Century 2007 Journal of European Studies 37 1 doi 10 1177 0047244107074186 A Spy in the Archives 2010 London Review of Books 32 23 3 8 Book reviews edit Year Review article Work s reviewed2014 Fitzpatrick Sheila September 2014 One of Us The Spy Who Relished Deception Australian Book Review 364 27 28 Macintyre Ben 2014 A Spy Among Friends Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408851739 2020 Fitzpatrick Sheila 6 February 2020 Which Face Emigres on the Make London Review of Books 42 3 7 9 Tromly Benjamin 2019 Cold War Exiles and the CIA Plotting to Free Russia Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198840404 Reddaway Peter 2020 The Dissidents A Memoir of Working with the Resistance in Russia 1960 90 Brookings Institution ISBN 9780815737735 2020 Fitzpatrick Sheila 10 September 2020 Whatever Made Him London Review of Books 42 17 9 11 Wagner Izabela 2020 Bauman A Biography Polity ISBN 9781509526864 2021 Fitzpatrick Sheila January February 2021 Knotty problems an examination of Europe s displaced persons Australian Book Review 428 12 14 Nasaw David 2020 The last million Europe s displaced persons from World War to Cold War Allen Lane References edit Fitzpatrick Brian Charles 1905 1965 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Fitzpatrick Sheila Mary Woman the Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth Century Australia Reports of the President and of the Treasurer John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation 1987 p 34 Award for Scholarly Distinction Recipients Historians org American Historical Association Retrieved 2 August 2021 a b c d Fitzpatrick Sheila Mary 1941 The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth Century Australia University of Melbourne The Australian Women s Register Retrieved 2 August 2021 On Stalin s Team the Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics Office for the Arts Department of Infrastructure Transport Regional Development and Communications 7 November 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2017 a b Professor Sheila Fitzpatrick University of Sydney Retrieved 2 August 2021 Magarey Medal Previous Winners The Australian Historical Association Retrieved 8 September 2017 2018 shortlists announced Office for the Arts Department of Infrastructure Transport Regional Development and Communications Retrieved 8 September 2017 Legvold Robert May June 2016 On Stalin s Team The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics Foreign Affairs Retrieved 2 August 2021 Whitewood Peter 4 March 2017 On Stalin s Team The Years of Living Dangerously in Soviet Politics written by Sheila Fitzpatrick Brill Retrieved 2 August 2021 White Russians Red Peril Australian Catholic University 15 April 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2021 Making use of newly discovered Russian language archives and drawing on a lifetime s study of Soviet history and politics Professor Fitzpatrick examines the early years of a diverse Russian Australian community and how Australian and Soviet intelligence agencies attempted to track and influence them While anti communist White Russians dreamed a war of liberation would overthrow the Soviet regime a dissident minority admired its achievements and thought of returning home Macintyre Stuart May 2021 A complex mosaic The early years of a diverse Russian Australian community Australian Book Review Retrieved 2 August 2021 Beddie Francesca 1 June 2021 White Russians Red Peril A Cold War History of Migration to Australia by Sheila Fitzpatrick Historians org American Historical Association Retrieved 2 August 2021 Manning Roberta T 2000 Reviewed Work Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s by Sheila Fitzpatrick The American Historical Review 105 5 1839 doi 10 2307 2652201 JSTOR 2652201 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1979 Education and Social Mobility in the Soviet Union 1921 1934 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511523595 ISBN 9780511523595 Fitzpatrick Sheila September 1979 Stalin and the Making of a New Elite 1928 1939 Slavic Review 38 3 pp 377 402 doi 10 2307 2496711 At p 38 Fitzpatrick Sheila Spring 1984 The Russian Revolution and Social Mobility A Reexamination of the Question of Social Support for the Soviet Regime in the 1920s and 1930s Politics and Society 13 2 119 141 doi 10 1177 003232928401300201 At p 13 a b c Karlsson Klas Goran 2008 Revisionism In Karlsson Klas Goran Schoenhals Michael Crimes Against Humanity Under Communist Regimes Research Review Stockholm Forum for Living History pp 29 33 ISBN 9789197748728 Fitzpatrick Sheila ed 1978 Cultural Revolution in Russia 1928 1931 Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253203373 Geyer Michael Fitzpatrick Sheila 2009 Beyond Totalitarianism Stalinism and Nazism Compared Cambridge University Press pp 3 4 8 12 17 19 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511802652 ISBN 978 0 521 72397 8 Davies Sarah Harris James 8 September 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge University Press p 3 ISBN 978 1 139 44663 1 Academic Sovietology a child of the early Cold War was dominated by the totalitarian model of Soviet politics Until the 1960s it was almost impossible to advance any other interpretation in the USA at least Davies Sarah Harris James 8 September 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge University Press pp 3 4 ISBN 978 1 139 44663 1 In 1953 Carl Friedrich characterised totalitarian systems in terms of five points an official ideology control of weapons and of media use of terror and a single mass party usually under a single leader There was of course an assumption that the leader was critical to the workings of totalitarianism at the apex of a monolithic centralised and hierarchical system it was he who issued the orders which were fulfilled unquestioningly by his subordinates Davies Sarah Harris James 8 September 2005 Joseph Stalin Power and Ideas Stalin A New History Cambridge University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 139 44663 1 Tucker s work stressed the absolute nature of Stalin s power an assumption which was increasingly challenged by later revisionist historians In his Origins of the Great Purges Arch Getty argued that the Soviet political system was chaotic that institutions often escaped the control of the centre and that Stalin s leadership consisted to a considerable extent in responding on an ad hoc basis to political crises as they arose Getty s work was influenced by political science of the 1960s onwards which in a critique of the totalitarian model began to consider the possibility that relatively autonomous bureaucratic institutions might have had some influence on policy making at the highest level Lenoe Matt 2002 Did Stalin Kill Kirov and Does It Matter The Journal of Modern History 74 2 352 380 doi 10 1086 343411 ISSN 0022 2801 S2CID 142829949 Davies Sarah Harris James 8 September 2005 Stalin A New History Cambridge University Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 1 139 44663 1 Sheila Fitzpatrick 2007 Revisionism in Soviet History History and Theory 46 4 77 91 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2303 2007 00429 x ISSN 1468 2303 the Western scholars who in the 1990s and 2000s were most active in scouring the new archives for data on Soviet repression were revisionists always archive rats such as Arch Getty and Lynne Viola Fitzpatrick Sheila October 1986 New Perspectives on Stalinism The Russian Review 45 4 357 373 JSTOR 130466 Quotes at pp 358 359 Fitzpatrick Sheila October 1986 Afterword Revisionism Revisited The Russian Review 45 4 409 413 JSTOR 130471 Quotes at pp 409 410 Translated into Italian and Spanish Further reading editHessler Julie Sheila Fitzpatrick An Interpretive Essay Writing the Stalin Era Sheila Fitzpatric and Soviet Historiography New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 21 36 Suny Ronald Grigor 2011 Writing Russia The Work of Sheila Fitzpatrick In Alexopoulos Golfo Hessler Julie Tomoff Kiril eds Writing the Stalin Era Sheila Fitzpatric and Soviet Historiography New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 1 20 External links editCarnig Jennifer Harmes William Koppes Steve Five faculty members elected as fellows of American academy The University of Chicago Chronicle 24 17 David Fox Michael et al 2007 An Interview with Sheila Fitzpatrick Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 8 3 479 486 doi 10 1353 kri 2007 0034 Harms William 8 June 1995 Graduate Teaching Award Harms William 5 December 2002 Fitzpatrick one of five distinguished scholars to receive Mellon grant University of Chicago The University of Chicago Chronicle 14 19 University of Sydney The University of Chicago Chronicle 22 5 ABC Conversations Sheila Fitzpatrick on working inside a secret Soviet 60s society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sheila Fitzpatrick amp oldid 1178997778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.