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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
1
(Moscow, 1960).
2
C.C.C.P., 1957—.
3
(1917-1957) (Moscow, 1957
4
(Moscow, 1959—), 2 vols, to date.
5
, 1957—.
6
, No. 8, 1960, p. 113. This is a review of the first few years of Modern and Contemporary History.
7 Pankratova as quoted in Shteppa, Konstantin F., Russian Historians and the Soviet State (New Brunswick, 1962), p. 365.Google Scholar
8
(Moscow, 1959);
(Moscow, 1959);
(Moscow, 1961);
(Moscow, 1960);
(Moscow, 1961);
(Moscow, 1959).
9
(1816-1820) (Moscow, 1957). The book was favorably reviewed in
, No. 2, 1959, pp. 187-89, and
, No. 12, 1959, pp. 169-71.
10
(Moscow, 1957).
11
1905-1907
, No. 12, 1955, pp. 126-38;
, No. 4, 1956, pp. 322-53;
No. 8, 1957, pp. 153-65;
No. 5, 1961, pp. 147-56;
, No. 2, 1962, pp. 96-114. Cherniak has recently published another monograph, which was unavailable to this reviewer:
(Moscow, 1962).
12 In a recent article one Soviet historian lamented the fact that after forty years Russia had produced no major monographs and only two book-length surveys of the history of the Comintern, Khristo Kabakchiev's sketchy and Stalinist (Moscow, 1929) and Joseph S. Iuzefovich's collection of essays on the founding of the Comintern
(Moscow, 1941),
, No. 4, 1957, pp. 28-29.