The Last Shall Be First: The Genealogy of Russian Historical Exceptionalism and the Road to Revolution, 1830-1917
Abstract
The legitimacy of Russia’s October Revolution of 1917 is widely debated due to its
divergences from a western-centric Marxist view of historical progression. In particular,
socialism was hastily declared amid underdeveloped economic conditions while being
executed via authoritarian means. Scholars have long sought to either critique or
justify such conspicuous departures from Marxist Orthodoxy and Occidental normativity.
This thesis looks past the Marxist and western-centric parameters of discussion to
instead investigate the indigenous intellectual traditions which prefigured, influenced,
and shaped these peculiar characteristics of the Russian Revolution. Contrary to the
dominant view that the Russian revolutionary tradition was essentially unilaterally
defined by a ‘Westernizing’ worldview, this thesis discloses alternative roots of
revolution in an anti-western philosophy that diametrically opposed the former ethos.
To draw this connection across eight decades, this study uncovers ideological continuities
across multiple movements, otherwise thought to be mutually-hostile, ultimately identifying
and organizing a novel genealogy of ideas. This investigation finds that the non-western
‘aberrations’ of the Russian Revolution were rather a logical continuation of an intellectual
heritage which precisely sought to bulk Western precedents for a historically-exceptional
road of the nation’s own.
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Honors thesisDepartment
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27327Citation
Duan, Patrick (2023). The Last Shall Be First: The Genealogy of Russian Historical Exceptionalism and the
Road to Revolution, 1830-1917. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27327.Collections
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