According to an anecdote related by Leo Tolstoy, a squatting and strangely gesticulating man he spotted by the side of the road and prematurely labelled a madman turned out to be engaged in a useful enterprise: sharpening his knife on a rock. This story, later often told as a homily by the Russian revolutionary leaders Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky (in the present volume) underlined the necessity of drawing sharp theoretical distinctions as a prelude to revolutionary politics, regardless of how obscure and sectarian this activity may seem to those looking at the struggle from the outside.
For Trotsky, the story has added salience in its applicability to Joseph Stalin — the man who sidelined him en route to becoming the leader of the world’s first socialist state. Stalin, according to the author of this newly edited biography, had no time for theory and partisan debate (which he regarded as a tempest in a teapot), because he was a mediocre, backward provincial, obsessed with self-aggrandisement and covering up his numerous psychological flaws. But as he bore the legitimacy of an Old Bolshevik, Trotsky argues, these traits made Stalin the ideal expression of the bureaucratic machine that ultimately buried the Russian Revolution.
However one feels about the Russian Revolution and its leading players, it is hard to deny that disputes among socialist groupings and parties in the early years of the 20th century had a decisive impact on the trajectory of the Soviet Union and later socialist regimes, as well as on the global system throughout the interwar and Cold War periods. To what degree those disagreements — as well as the conflict between this book’s author and its subject — still constitute salient political issues and not historical arcana is a separate question. To Alan Woods — the book’s editor and translator, and leading theoretician of the UK-based International Marxist Tendency — that clash still remains highly relevant.
Eighty years in the making, the biography of Joseph Stalin by his rival and contemporary Leon Trotsky is finally complete
The completion of Trotsky’s final work, unfinished as a result of the author’s death at the hands of an assassin in Stalin’s employ, is a product of a multiyear labour of love for Woods who had to rework pieces of the manuscript housed at the Trotsky archive at Harvard University. For Woods, the task was made necessary by the perversion of the manuscript by Charles Malamuth, the translator and redactor of the 1946 English-language edition.
Malamuth — a figure close to many of Trotsky’s American sympathisers who evolved into anti-Soviet Cold War liberals — comes in for Woods’s criticism for trying to fit Trotsky’s text into his own ideological framework. The removal of Malamuth’s editorialising, the insertion of unpublished fragments from the archives, as well as Woods’s own explications, constitute the main distinctions of the new edition. Whether they improve and complete the text is open to debate. Unlike Malamuth, Woods is Trotsky’s disciple, but his own interpolations detract from the text stylistically — a major drawback as Trotsky himself made it a point to castigate Stalin for his lack of style in this very work. Moreover, the attempt to organise unfinished sections by chronologically arranging various fragments from the archives makes the book rather bloated.