In his now-classic essay, Professor Theodore von Laue offers a highly original interpretation of the history of the Soviet Union and Communism. The Communist overthrow of the Tsar in 1917 has traditionally been seen as an angry reaction to incompetance of the old regime. But according to von Laue, it was more than that. The new leaders desperately needed to catch up with the West. For by now the industrial revolution had transformed Western Europe while Russia lagged far behind. Determined to catch up, the Communists forced industrialization and modernization on their peoples. But herein lay the crux of the problem: "How to infuse the creativity of Western urban-industrial civilization, evolved under highly favorable geographic and historical circumstances, into habits and institutions shaped by relentless adversity." (p. 3). The method the Soviets, and Stalin in particular, used to deal with this was coercion, a un-Western way to try and emulate the West. And it failed miserably. For according to von Laue, "Where political and economic unity has been traditionally imposed by force, it cannot be readily replaced, in face of profound geographical and historical obstacles, by voluntary cooperation." Thus despite the repression, the gulags, the forced resettlements, and forced labor, the Soviet peoples never developed the creativity, initiative or cooperation to modernize. The multi-ethnic facade finally crumbled under Gorbachev's liberalization policies.
Not only is von Laue's view of the Soviet project as more of an attempt to catch up with the West than class struggle novel, but his assertion that culture, rather than material factors, drives development is also provocative. Von Laue later expanded on the themes in this book and applied them on a global scale in "The World Revolution of Westernization," where he examines the industrial and democratic revolutions that began in Britain and France, and traces their impact on the rest of the world, arguing that most cultures were unable to assimilate these concepts into their existing norms, thus disrupting these societies. The only societies that sucessfully adopted Westernization were the United States (itself an offshoot of Britain) and Japan, a highly imitative culture. But these ideas originated in "Why Lenin? Why Stalin? Why Gorbachev?" As for the future of Russia, von Laue remains dubious, arguing that it is impossible to transfer "cultural achievements, especially human attitudes, values, and institutions, from one country to other, unprepared countries." (p. 179) Perhaps that is why Russia still lags far behind.