It is now well over a hundred years since the birth of Lenin. If his
writings are to have the relevance for contemporary political action, it
is necessary that they be understood within the specific historical
context in which they arose. It is such an understanding that David Lane
provides in this book. Dr Lane addresses four distinct, though related,
topics: Lenin's analysis of revolution; Leninism as an ideology
legitimating the Russian Revolution; a detached analysis of the
revolutionary process; and the relevance of Lenin and the Russian
Revolution for social and political change. He begins by showing that,
studied thematically, the various parts of Lenin's thinking are
complementary in providing an analysis of capitalism and the
justification for socialist revolution. The book is a short, concise,
detached, yet sympathetic account of Lenin's thinking on revolution, its
implications for the rise of Stalinism and its significance for the
model of socialism as developed in the USSR. It will appeal to
sociologists, political scientists and historians interested in
Leninism, Stalinism and revolutionary theory, as well as to others
concerned with the theories and processes of social change.