
Published online:
31 October 2013
Published in print:
28 July 2009
Online ISBN:
9780300145700
Print ISBN:
9780300145694
Contents
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Opinions Opinions
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The Theological Dispute The Theological Dispute
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Double Standards Double Standards
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Does “The Eastern Soul” Exist? Does “The Eastern Soul” Exist?
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The Soviet Union is Not a Continuation But a Negation of Old Russia The Soviet Union is Not a Continuation But a Negation of Old Russia
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The “Secret” of Communism is in the West The “Secret” of Communism is in the West
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The Phenomenon of Communism The Phenomenon of Communism
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Poland under Russia and Poland under Communism Poland under Russia and Poland under Communism
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The “Polish Side” and the “russian Side” The “Polish Side” and the “russian Side”
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The “Communist Side” The “Communist Side”
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Konstantin Pavlovich and Konstanty Rokossowski Konstantin Pavlovich and Konstanty Rokossowski
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The Political Gist Upside Down The Political Gist Upside Down
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The Comparison: “Man” The Comparison: “Man”
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Not the Rule of a State, but the Rule of a Party Not the Rule of a State, but the Rule of a Party
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Cite
Mackiewicz, Józef, 'Does Russia Still Exist?', The Triumph of Provocation (New Haven, CT , 2009; online edn, Yale Scholarship Online, 31 Oct. 2013), https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300145694.003.0003, accessed 9 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the political influence of the Soviet Union in Poland. It contends that Polrealism was based on the false premise that the Soviet Union was in essence the old Russia and provides evidence that the Soviet Union was not a continuation but a negation of Old Russia. It also argues that the ideological inspiration for communism did not come from Russia but from Western Europe and that Poland was not subordinated to the Soviet state per se but was directly subordinated to the Communist Party.
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