Robert Vincent "Bill" Daniels (1926–2010) was an American historian and educator specializing in the history of the Soviet Union. He is best remembered as the author of two seminal monographs on the history of Soviet Russia —The Conscience of the Revolution (1960) and Red October (1967) — and as author or editor of an array of widely used Russian history textbooks which helped to shape the thinking of two generations of American college students.
Biography
Early years
Daniels, known to his friends and acquaintances by the nickname "Bill", was born on January 4, 1926, in Boston, Massachusetts. He was the son of Robert W. Daniels, a career officer in the United States Army, and Helen Hoyt Daniels.[1] The Daniels family moved extensively throughout Bill's childhood, but he generally returned each summer to Burlington, Vermont, the town from whence his parents hailed and where his grandparents remained.
Daniels was the first director of the Area and International Studies program at the University of Vermont, serving in that capacity from 1962 to 1965.[1] From 1964 to 1969 he was the chair of the History Department at UVM.[2] He was also the director of the Experimental Program of the College of Arts and Sciences from 1969 to 1971.[1]
Daniels retired from the University of Vermont in 1988, assuming the title of emeritus professor.
As was the case with many historians of the Soviet period, Daniels became greatly interested in the process of development in Russia following the 1991 collapse of communism and authored several books on the topic. He also was a contributor of analysis on the changing situation in Russia to liberal magazines such as Dissent and The Nation.
In 2004, Daniels was awarded an honorary Doctor of Law degree by the University of Vermont and the university created the Robert V. Daniels Award for Outstanding Contributions in the field of International Studies.[1]
Although best remembered as the author and editor of a series of paperback academic textbooks targeted at university undergraduates, Daniels contributed two important works of history during the decade of the 1960s.
In The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia, Daniels revisited the origins of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in Russia, depicting the Bolshevik organization as a multi-tendency organization from its inception through the assertion of full control by Joseph Stalin during the collectivization campaign of 1929. "Fundamental changes were taking place in the movement during these years," Daniels argued, and therefore "present-day Communism must accordingly be regarded as the evolutionary product of circumstances."[3]: 3 Such a view stood in opposition to the dominant totalitarian model of the day, which tended to depict the Soviet Union as monolithic and immutable without the exertion of external force.
In Red October: The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, published in 1967 at the time of the 50th anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Daniels returned to his vision of a multi-tendency Bolshevik Party. In this work, Daniels detailed the confusion and process of persuasion by Lenin over the party leadership, which culminated in the insurrection of November 1917. As Daniels himself noted, his book was dedicated to showing the process by which the Bolsheviks managed to seize power at the center of the Russian Empire, rather than examining the social background of the revolutionaries and their opponents, contributing factors in Russian society, or the nature of the revolution at the periphery of the empire, away from the urban center.[4]
Daniels' emphasis on the multi-tendency nature of the early Bolshevik organization, with its implications of multiple possible paths of development rather than an inherent road to totalitariandictatorship, presaged the work of a generation of younger political historians such as Stephen F. Cohen and the wave of social historians who came to the fore in the profession of Soviet studies during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s.[5][6][7]
Works
Theses and dissertations
"Current Developments in Union Wage Policy." Harvard University, A.B. Honors Thesis, 1945.
"The Left Opposition in the Russian Communist Party, to 1924." Harvard University, Ph.D. dissertation, 1950.
Books
The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1960.
A Documentary History of Communism. (Editor.) New York: Random House, 1960.
The Nature of Communism. New York: Random House, 1962.
^ abcDaniels, Robert Vincent (1960). The Conscience of the Revolution: Communist Opposition in Soviet Russia. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
^Daniels, R. V. (1967). Red October: The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. New York: Charles Scirbner's Sons. p. viii.