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  1. Stalin and Mao. First edition. Stalin and Mao: A Comparison of the Russian and Chinese Revolutions ( French: La récidive: Révolution russe, révolution chinoise) is a non-fiction book by Lucien Bianco, published by Gallimard in 2014. Its 2018 English translation, done by Krystyna Horko, was published by the Chinese University of Hong Kong Press.

  2. A Review of Stalin and Mao by Lucien Bianco Chang-tai Hung Stalin and Mao: A Comparison of the Russian and Chinese Revolutions, by Lucien Bianco, translated by Krystyna Horko. Hong Kong: Chinese Univer-sity Press, 2018. 448 pp. US$65.00 (Hardcover). ISBN: 9789882370654. Comparing major revolutions in the modern era is a daunting scholarly

  3. Nov 1, 2021 · Reflecting the author's profound knowledge of the two revolutionary transformations, their horrors, and their human costs, this rich comparative study builds on scholarship concerning the rise to power of the Chinese communists and Mao's regime and overturns some of its cornerstones. First, Lucien Bianco in Stalin and Mao stresses the Soviet pedigree of Mao's agrarian policies. (Indeed ...

  4. This book presents a global comparison of the Russian and Chinese revolutions. Numerous studies compare—or more frequently oppose—a given aspect of the two revolutions, but Lucien Bianco’s work stands out for providing an overall view and a synthesis. The author analyzes the nature of the two revolutions, their different origins and ...

  5. Mao learned to be a communist from Stalin, and his only contact with the ideas of Lenin and Marx was through Stalin. That said, Bianco recognises two differences: Mao was much more given to the ideals of equality and rural revolution; and Mao was more of an ideological and distant ruler, while Stalin was a hands-on helmsman.

    • Igor Iwo Chabrowski
  6. That said, Bianco recognises two differences: Mao was much more given to the ideals of equality and rural revolution; and Mao was more of an ideological and distant ruler, while Stalin was a hands-on helmsman. 7Chapters 4 and 5 provide a core for the argument in the book: the first deals with “The Peasants,” the second with “The Famines.”.

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  8. Russel Tarr compares and contrasts the rise to power of two Communist leaders. At first glance, the rise to power of Stalin and Mao appear easily comparable: both were members of deeply divided communist parties and both operated within societies that suffered from civil war and the ever-present threat of foreign attack. To continue reading ...