Closed Societies, Open Minds: Andrzej Walicki, Isaiah Berlin and the Writing of Russian History During the Cold War

Dialogue and Universalism 16 (1/2):7-72 (2006)
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Abstract

This article compares the thinking of Andrzej Walicki and Isaiah Berlin on the nineteenth-century Russian intelligentsia and on Soviet totalitarianism. It suggests that Berlin saw totalitarianism as an externally imposed political system, whereas Walicki understood totalitarianism to depend both on external pressure and inner coercion. The article draws on a variety of published and unpublished sources, including personal interviews with Walicki and Berlin’s archives at the New Bodleian Library in Oxford, England.

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Citations of this work

Milton, Mill, and Berlin’s History of Monism and Pluralism.Seth Lobis - 2020 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 32 (4):493-516.

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References found in this work

Historical Inevitability.T. M. Knox - 1955 - Philosophical Quarterly 5 (19):189-189.
Historical Inevitability.ISAIAH BERLIN - 1956 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 6 (24):338-340.
Isaiah Berlin as I Knew Him.Andrzej Walicki - 2005 - Dialogue and Universalism 15 (9-10):5-50.

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