Lisa A. Kirschenbaum is a Professor of History at West Chester University, Pennsylvania. She is the author of The Legacy of the Siege of Leningrad, 1941-1995: Myth, Memories, and Monuments (2006) and Small Comrades: Revolutionizing Childhood in Soviet Russia, 1917-1932 (2001). She is the recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities and grants from the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies of the Woodrow Wilson Center and the International Research and Exchanges Board. She has published articles in the Slavic Review, European History Quarterly and Nationalities Papers, and has contributed to the Women's Review of Books.
Introduction: being communist
Part I. International Communists and the Soviet Union, 1930-6: 1. Learning to be Bolshevik
2. Imagining, seeing, feeling the revolution
Part II. Being Bolshevik, Making History in Spain, 1936-9: 3. 'All advanced and progressive humanity'
4. True Bolsheviks and Trotskyite bastards
5. Best comrades, tough guys, and respectable communists
Part III. International Communists and the Memory of the Spanish Civil War, 1939-53: 6. From 'our war' to the great fatherland war
7. The early Cold War and the fate of 'progressive humanity'
Epilogue: internationalism and the Spanish Civil War after Stalin.