![]() Leon Trotsky, Stalin’s worst enemy, was far and away his most influential 20th-century interpreter, shaping the views of a generation of historians, from Isaac Deutscher onward. During his lifetime, sympathizers made him into a superhero, but opponents have imposed their prejudices as well. Politics have influenced Stalin’s biographers too. Other accounts have featured the accident that left Stalin with a withered arm, the smallpox infection that badly scarred his face, or the birth defect that joined two of his toes and gave him a webbed left foot-the mark of the devil. Just as Hitler’s fanaticism has been “explained” by his upbringing, his sex life, or his alleged single testicle, so has Stalin’s psychopathic cruelty been attributed to the father who, in Stalin’s own words, “thrashed him mercilessly,” or to the mother who may have had an affair with a local priest. Under Freud’s influence, many ambitious biographers-not to mention psychologists, philosophers, and historians-have sought answers in their subject’s childhood. ![]() How did Stalin become Stalin? Or, to put it more precisely: How did Iosif Vissarionovich Djugashvili-the grandson of serfs, the son of a washerwoman and a semiliterate cobbler-become Generalissimo Stalin, one of the most brutal mass murderers the world has ever known? How did a boy born in an obscure Georgian hill town become a dictator who controlled half of Europe? How did a devout young man who chose to study for the priesthood grow up to become a zealous atheist and Marxist ideologue?
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