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Kirsten's Thesis
'Kirsten's Thesis' appears on a family website as a VERY long - 32,000 words - four-page study of the coming of the Russian Revolution on. Her account seems extensively- and carefully-researched, and certainly includes useful quotes by those involved in the March Revolution.
It would be too onerous to read and note Kirsten's Thesis in full, but - if you skim-read and cherry-pick - you will be able to get good 'colour' about the impact of key issues such as Bloody Sunday, Rasputin etc.
What is 'Kirsten's Thesis'?At base, Kirsten blames Nicholas for the war; the Russian revolution and the succeeding events were, she concludes: 'a testament to the power of a single individual's personality in directing the course of events, as well as the possibility for calamity when that individual rules a nation'.
What is particularly useful about Kirsten's ideas is that she divides the causes of the revolution into two parts - the years 1896-1914, and the years 1914-1917. On his accession in 1896, Nicholas was an autocrat, held in immense respect and even love by his millions of desperately poor and oppressed subjects. So first the people had to lose their love, before they decided to chuck him out. Kirsten entitles the years 1896-1914 as 'Separating the People from their Tsar'; for her, these are the years when the mass of the Russian people became disillusioned with their emperor, leaving him insecure on his throne. Then, during the war years 1914-1917 (which Kirsten calls 'prelude to revolution' - years which revealed all of Nicholas's incompetence), they finally came round to the uprising which toppled Nicholas from power.
This sequence:
autocracy à disillusion à disastrous failure à revolution
is an important insight about how Nicholas caused the revolution which destroyed him.
'Kirsten's Thesis'Kirsten's These has four chapters:
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Did You KnowKirsten B Lauber, from Philadelphia, was in 2008 a PhD Sociologist at the University of Albany, US. This paper was the final project for her honor's major in History from Union College, NY, from where she had graduated in 1999.
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