Stalin as a Russian Grand Strategist

Event time: 
Friday, April 12, 2019 - 12:45pm
Location: 
Connecticut Hall, 2nd Fl Faculty Room See map
344 College St
New Haven, CT
Speaker/Performer: 
Stephen Kotkin, John P. Birkelund '52 Professor in History and International Affairs, Princeton University
Event description: 

The Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy presents the following lecture:

Stalin as a Russian Grand Strategist 
 
By Stephen Kotkin, John P. Birkelund ‘52 Professor in History and International Affairs, Princeton University
 
Bio:
Professor Kotkin has been teaching in the department since 1989. He holds a joint appointment in the Woodrow Wilson School for Public and International Affairs at Princeton. He is also a Research Scholar at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

Professor Kotkin established the Princeton department’s Global History initiative and workshop, and teaches the graduate seminar on global history since the 1850s. He served on the core editorial committee of the World Politics, flagship journal in comparative politics. He founded and co-edited a book series on Northeast Asia that published six volumes. From 2003 until 2007, he was a member and then chair of the editorial board at Princeton University Press. From 1996 until 2009 he directed Princeton’s Program in Russian and Eurasian Studies. He has been the vice dean of the Woodrow Wilson School and acting director of the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (PIIRS). In 2014-15 he is serving as acting director of what is now Russian, East European, and Eurasian studies. Outside Princeton, from 2006 (until taking a break in February 2009) he was the regular book reviewer for the New York Times Sunday Business section.

His latest book is Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941 (Penguin, 2017).

His research interests include authoritarianism, geopolitics, global political economy, empire, and modernism in the arts and politics.

Admission: 
Free