The Lost Opportunity

Attempts at Unification of the Anti-Bolsheviks:1917-1919

By (author) Christopher Lazarski

Publication date:

26 September 2008

Length of book:

190 pages

Publisher

University Press of America

Dimensions:

237x162mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780761841197

The term "White movement" is commonly associated with the military struggle against the Soviet regime pursued by various anti-Bolshevik armies. Such a perception of the movement neglects the considerable effort undertaken by Russian political elites to organize political opposition to Bolshevik power. Acting through several multiparty organizations, these elites repeatedly attempted to form a common anti-Bolshevik front, to restore an all-Russian government and to liberate Russia from the Bolsheviks. In The Lost Opportunity, Lazarski explores these facets of the anti-Bolshevik struggle, which have been almost entirely ignored by historical scholarship. If we consider that the men and women who composed those elites were the most active and dynamic group in Russian civil society that neglect is striking. Their main task—the restoration of an all-Russian government—was of utmost importance for the anti-Bolsheviks, whose main centers were located on the peripheries of the Russian Empire and often had contradictory goals. Due to the paucity of interest in the activity of White political elites, this book is a pioneering study.
This compact well-organized volume traces the ultimately failed attempts of Russia's political elites to unify their resistance to the new Bolshevik state. . . . Scholars can be grateful that this remarkably intricate study fills in a piece of the Civil War-era puzzle.