Jack M. Bloom, Indiana University Northwest
In 1980 Polish workers astonished the world by demanding and winning an independent union with the right to strike, called Solidarity–the beginning of the end of the Soviet empire. Jack M. Bloom’s Seeing Through the Eyes of the Polish Revolution explains how it happened, from the imposition to Communism to its end, based on 150 interviews of Solidarity leaders, activists, supporters and opponents. Bloom presents the perspectives and experiences of these participants. He shows how an opposition was built, the battle between Solidarity and the ruling party, the conflicts that emerged within each side during this tense period, how Solidarity survived the imposition of martial law and how the opposition forced the government to negotiate itself out of power.
Biographical note
Readership
Reviews
Wolfgang Schlott (Universität Bremen), International Newsletter of Communist Studies Online, XX/XXI (2014/15), nos. 27-28
Table of contents
1. Patronage and Corruption in Communist Poland
PART I: THE EMERGENCE OF OPPOSITION
2. The First Systemic Crisis
3. ‘Living Parallel to the System’: The Solidarity Generation
4. A Line of Blood
5. An Opposition Emerges
6. Independent Organisations and Opposition
PART II: THE SOLIDARITY REVOLUTION
7. The Solidarity Explosion
8. Social Solidarity and the Victory of Solidarność
9. The Solidarity Revolution
10. The Solidarity Offensive
11. Bydgoszcz: the Turning Point
12. The Party at War with Itself
References
Index