"Gleb Albert’s book is a splendid accomplishment. For the first time we are taken deep inside the early Bolshevik internationalist imaginary, with results fully comparable to the best of the social and cultural histories of local communisms produced since the 1970s, country by country, for the rest of Europe." — Geoff Eley, University of Michigan"Albert uses his methodological tools to great effect to provide original insights into early Soviet society. This is a theoretically sound, empirically remarkable, and intellectually outstanding piece of scholarship." — Matthias Neumann, University of East Anglia"Gleb J. Albert has produced an admirable work of scholarship on the first decade of Soviet society. The lens of “world revolution” not only gives us insight into Soviet foreign policy but even more, it helps us to understand the nature of communist enthusiasm during these years. Drawing on a number of archives in Russia and abroad, informed by a great deal of reading in contemporary periodicals and propaganda works, this study does much to help us understand just how early Soviet activists saw their world and their place in it. Das Charisma der Revolution is a worthy addition to the literature on the Russian Revolution in this centenary year." – Theodore R. Weeks, Southern Illinois University"Albert’s study constitutes a breakthrough in the scholarship of the [early Soviet] period." — Heiko Haumann, University of Basel"Albert’s study provides great insights into the early years of Soviet rule. It is a must-read for those interested in the birth of the propaganda state and the difficulties of agitprop during the early years of Soviet power. Few other studies are of equal merit when explaining the relationship between ideology, party-state and population from the Russian Revolution to the beginnings of Stalinism." — Jan C. Behrends, European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder)"Gleb J. Albert’s monograph on revolutionary internationalism in early Soviet society forms a pivotal addition to a growing international research field. [...] The main goals of the book are [...] to investigate 'why the link to a global revolutionary movement could have been attractive and identity-forming for certain social groups', [...] and to examine 'which practices allowed internationalism to become constitutive for Soviet society?' (p. 2). [...] Albert contributes with a new analysis of the overlooked years of revolutionary internationalism that flourished before 1927 [...]. The book’s main argument is that it was the MOPR that finally institutionalized the charisma of world revolution in the Soviet Union. [...] Albert’s book forms a cornerstone for these future studies on revolutionary internationalism and deserves to be widely read by scholars of Soviet history and internationalism." — Kasper Brasken, University of Helsinki