
The Russian Pendulum
Autocracy-Democracy-Bolshevism
Arthur Bullard(Author)
David W. McFadden(Editor)
Anthem Press
Published on 10. March 2026
Book
Hardback
190 pages
978-1-83999-694-8 (ISBN)
Description
Arthur Bullard's The Russian Pendulum (1919) is a personal and political analysis of the Russian Revolution, from the Revolution of 1905 through the beginning of the Civil War in 1918. It reflects Bullard's own perspective, as an advocate for change in Russia with American help. Bullard's experience as an advisor to Colonel House and Woodrow Wilson as a key staffer for the Committee for Public Information in Russia strongly colors his analysis. In this provocative study, Bullard analyzes the February Revolution, Lenin's success with "land and peace" proposals, and then ends with Bullard's own proposals, entitled "What IS To Be Done?" Here he argues that those concerned with Russia should seek information on all sides of the problem and should accept that an "agrarian revolution" has occurred and that any regeneration of Russia must involve public education and commerce. If the United States is to help, it must provide education cooperation, and avoid military intervention.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
US School Grade: College Graduate Student
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
434 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83999-694-8 (9781839996948)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Arthur Bullard (1879-1929), the author of The Russian Pendulum and numerous articles and reviews, was a native of St. Joseph, Missouri and the son of Henry Bullard, a prominent Presbyterian minister. He was a foreign correspondent for various American and European journals, edited "The Outlook" (1914) and "Our World" (1922-1924), served on the Committee on Public Information's divisions in Washington, Western Russia, and Siberia (1917-1919), headed the Russian division of the Department of State (1919-1921), and wrote novels and books on political subjects.
Content
David W. McFadden; Editor's Introduction; The Russian Pendulum; Preface; Book I; European Russia; I. Lenin; II. Workingmen-Soldiers-Poorer Peasants; III. War and the Old Regime; IV. Revolution and the Provisional Government; V. Zemstvo, Duma, Co-operatives; VI. The Soviets; VII. The Political Parties; VIII. "Land"; IX. "Peace"; X. Kerensky; XI. The Bolshevist Campaign; XII. The Question of Majority Support; XIII. The Bolsheviks at Work; XIV. "German Gold"; XV. Allied Diplomacy in Russia; XVI. Lenin's Foreign Policy; XVII. The Pendulum of the Revolution