Du Communisme : Crimes, Terreur E... | Le Livre Noir

Le Livre noir du communisme: Crimes, terreur, répression (The Black Book of Communism), published in 1997, is a landmark work of historiography that provides a global catalog of mass violence committed by communist regimes. Edited by Stéphane Courtois, the book is written by a team of European historians who drew on newly opened archives from the former Soviet bloc to detail decades of terror, famine, and repression.

The book meticulously documents atrocities in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia, North Korea, Vietnam, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Africa. Le Livre noir du communisme : Crimes, terreur e...

Authors used archival research, eyewitness accounts, and survivor testimonies to analyze the "mechanics of terror," such as forced collectivization, dekulakization, and the Gulag system. Le Livre noir du communisme: Crimes, terreur, répression

The central thesis, primarily articulated in Courtois's introduction, is that violence was not an accidental byproduct of specific leaders (like Stalin or Mao) but was from its inception. The book argues that communism was a criminal enterprise that prioritized ideology over human life, leading to systematic "class genocide". Authors used archival research

A highly controversial aspect is Courtois's direct comparison between Communism and Nazism, suggesting they were two sides of the same totalitarian coin. The "100 Million" Death Toll