Seminars
Participants are taught in small seminar groups of up to 10 students, and receive two one-on-one tutorials with their tutor.
Sunday
Seminar 1
Russia in War and Revolution
Why did the Tsarist system collapse in March 1917?
Why was the Provisional Government of Kerensky overthrown by Lenin in October 1917?
Seminar 2
Revolution and Civil War
How did the Bolsheviks establish a government in 1917 – 18?
What was the role of Trotsky in creating the Red Army?
Why did the ‘Reds’ defeat the ‘Whites’ and foreign intervention in the Civil War of 1918 – 1922?
Monday
Seminar 3
Lenin’s successor, Trotsky of Stalin?
Lenin’s death.
Faction fighting and temporary alliances.
Why did Stalin win?
Seminar 4
Revolution from above in the 1930s.
‘Giddy with success.’ The First Five Year Plan.
Industrialisation and Collectivisation.
Terror and Purges.
Tuesday
Seminar 5
‘The Great Patriotic War.’
The Nazi-Soviet Alliance.
Blitzkrieg
Seminar 6
Art & Architecture in the Soviet Union
The struggle to survive and fight back.
The age of experimentation.
What was ‘Socialist Realism?’
Power and Propaganda.
Wednesday
Seminar 7
Cold War Europe.
Why did Europe split so quickly between ‘East’ and ‘West’ after 1945?
How were Communist regimes established in Poland, the Baltic States, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria?
Did the massive expenditure during the Cold War fatally damage the Soviet Union?
Seminar 8
Soviet regimes I – The German Democratic Republic.
The creation of the DDR.
The Berlin Wall.
Honecker, the Stasi and the end of the DDR.
Thursday
Seminar 9
Soviet Regimes II – Poland
How a pro-Soviet regime was installed in Poland.
Economic recline in the 1970s.
The rise of Solidarity.
Seminar 10
The Fall of the Soviet Union
The advent of Gorbachev in 1985.
Perestroika and Glasnost.
How to reform the system without destroying it?
Friday
Seminar 11
Presentations
Seminar 12
Conclusions
Programme timetable
The daily timetable will normally be as follows:
Saturday
14.00–16.30 - Registration
16.30–17.00 - Orientation meeting
17.00–17.30 - Classroom orientation for tutor and students
17.30–18.00 - Drinks reception
18.00–20.00 - Welcome dinner
Sunday – Friday
09.00–10.30 - Seminar
10.30–11.00 - Tea/coffee break
11.00–12.30 - Seminar
12.30–13.30 - Lunch
13.30–18.00 - Afternoons are free for tutorials, individual study, course-related field trips or exploring the many places of interest in and around Oxford.
18.00–19.00 - Dinner (there is a formal gala dinner every Friday to close each week of the programme).
A range of optional social events will be offered throughout the summer school. These are likely to include: a quiz night, visit to historic pubs in Oxford, visit to Christ Church for Evensong and after-dinner talks and discussions.