What is trotskyism in simple terms

Leon Trotsky

Soviet politician and revolutionary (1879–1940)

"Trotsky" redirects here. For other uses, see Trotsky (disambiguation).

In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Davidovich and the family name is Bronstein.

Leon Trotsky

Trotsky in 1924

In office
14 March 1918 – 12 January 1925
Premier
Preceded byNikolai Podvoisky
Succeeded byMikhail Frunze
In office
8 November 1917 – 13 March 1918
PremierVladimir Lenin
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byGeorgy Chicherin
In office
20 September 1917 – 26 December 1917
Preceded byNikolay Chkheidze
Succeeded byGrigory Zinoviev
Born

Lev Davidovich Bronstein


(1879-11-07)7 November 1879 (N.S.)
Yanovka, Russian Empire
Died21 August 1940(1940-08-21) (aged 60)
Mexico City, Mexico
Manner of deathAssassination
Resting placeLeon Trotsky House Museum, Mexico City, Mexico
Citizenship
Political party
Spouses
Children
Signature

Central institut

Trotsky offered asylum in Mexico

After the Russian Revolution of 1917 Leon Trotsky organised the Red Army to fight and defeat the Tsarist Whites. He was the most important figure in the Bolshevik regime after Lenin, but when Lenin’s health began to fail a struggle for the succession developed between Trotsky and Stalin, who was general secretary of the Communist Party from 1922. Intellectually and as an administrator Trotsky was superior to Stalin, but he was no match for the Georgian’s ruthless power hunger.

After Lenin died in 1924 Trotsky was gradually removed from all positions of influence. He was kept under surveillance, his phone was tapped and there were mysterious attempts to kill him. In 1926 he was dropped from the Politburo and in 1927 he and his supporters were expelled from the Communist Party. In January 1928 he was exiled to Alma-Ata in Kazakhstan with his wife Natalya Sedova and their son Lev. From there he wrote fierce criticisms of Stalin and blistering attacks on opponents of Stalin and Stalinism in the party who had made their peace with the regime.

In

The Art of the Communist Museum: The Leon Trotsky House in Coyoacán

This is the latest installment of Public Streets, a biweekly urban observations series curated by Ellis Avery.

 

Villa Coyoacán, Mexico, home to El Museo Casa de Leon Trotsky, is now a posh neighborhood in the south of Mexico City, but it was hardly more than a provincial town on the outskirts of the capital when Trotsky lived there, in 1939–40, before the mega-metropolis to the north subsumed it. The Trotsky House Museum, which now abuts a highway, feels somehow removed from the cobblestone streets, quaint Catholic churches, and ornate fountains of Coyoacán. However, as one approaches the home of a Russian Marxist, it feels fitting that colonial beauty should give way to the steel-barricaded utilitarianism of the Río Churubusco highway.

We forget that Trotsky was a pragmatist. We associate him with the ultimate idealism of permanent revolution—the idea that the working classes would unite across national lines to create a permanent revolution, an idealism disproved most recently by the xenophobia that

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