Foreign Affairs - 03.2020 - 04.2020

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Recent Books

March/April 2020 181

solace in the fact that Russia’s top
leaders do not seek to reinstate across-
the-board state ownership or return to a
Soviet-style totalitarian past.

Stuck on Communism: Memoir of a
Russian Historian
BY LEWIS H. SIEGELBAUM.
Northern Illinois University Press,
2019, 216 pp.

Remembering Leningrad: The Story of a
Generation
BY MARY MCAULEY. University o’
Wisconsin Press, 2019, 256 pp.

These two memoirs are both written by
respected left-wing scholars o¤ Russia,
but they dier in the extent to which
their authors immersed themselves in
Russian life. Siegelbaum entered Co-
lumbia University in 1966 and chose to
study the Soviet Union because o‘ his
communist leanings. His memoir reads
like a bildungsroman: Siegelbaum
describes his early years as a child o’ “a
Red” (his father joined the U.S. Com-
munist Party in 1939), his participation
as a young Marxist in the 1967–68
student protests, and his subsequent
development into a Russian labor
historian schooled in Marxist theory.
As labor history receded in importance,
his somewhat reluctant shift toward
cultural and material history proved
fortunate: his history o’ the Soviet
automobile was awarded two presti-
gious prizes. Siegelbaum’s memoir is
also a chronicle o’ the trends and
debates in his ¥eld from the 1970s until
his retirement in 2018, with a special
focus on the new research opportunities
that followed the collapse o’ the Soviet
Union, as archives were opened and

Eastern Europe and Former


Soviet Republics


Maria Lipman


The Tragedy of Property: Private Life,
Ownership, and the Russian State
BY MAXIM TRUDOLYUBOV.
TRANSLATED BY ARCH TAIT. Polity,
2018, 216 pp.


T


rudolyubov traces the roots o’
what he sees as the tragedy o’
Russia: its failure to establish
democratic institutions that would
defend its citizens against the whims o’
their rulers. With concision and clarity,
he blames Russia’s historical lack o’
robust property rights. Through much
o¤ Russian history, the ruler dispensed
private property—and especially real
estate—as a “privilege” to the upper
class. In western Europe, by contrast,
property rights emerged in the course
o‘ long social battles and were closely
associated with the development o’
common law and the liberal tradition.
Anxious to maintain the state’s unchal-
lenged supremacy, Russian rulers at all
times were wary o’ private property.
The Bolsheviks outlawed it altogether;
for decades, the state was the sole
owner and distributor o’ all land and
urban housing. Today’s Russians may
own their apartments and have better
opportunities for a private life than
earlier generations, but the state retains
discretionary power over large proper-
ties, and the threat o’ sudden redistri-
bution remains. Although he draws a
bleak picture, Trudolyubov ¥nds some

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