London: Hamish Hamilton, 1978. — 450 p.
Скан 600 dpi.
This is the absorbing story of a quixoticcrusade by a group of Russian emigres to take over the Soviet Union, dislodge its Communist rulers, and establish a fascist state there. Rich in irony, humour, and not a little pathos, The Russian Fascists provides the first full account of this small but dynamic element within the Russian emigration.
Cast out by the Revolution and now powerless, these exiles tried to compensate for their political impotence by engaging in desperate fantasies. Eager to reestablish themselves in their homeland, they sought collaboration with anyone who catered to their illusions —Chinese warlords, Japanese generals, Nazi satraps and, eventually, Josef Stalin.
The Russian Diaspora
Genesis of the Emigre Right in Europe
White Ghettos in China
The Boy from Blagoveshchensk
The Japanese Connection
The Manchurian Mafia
A Russian Cinderella
New England’s Russian Duce
Toward a Fascist United Front
Harbin Summit
Schism
Metastasis
National Revolution Far Eastern Style
Connecticut Capers
Mounting Storm
Year of the Apocalypse
Mime and Punishment
Last Tango in Harbin
Fatal Conversion
Transmutation
Portmortem
Glossary of Abbreviations and Selected Terms
Notes