ok. here goes my spill.
from the very beginning ive wanted to do something with a revolution - french, russian, cuban, etc because i think that regardless of the fact that they are well studies, analysed, researched,etc. they are the real turning points in our society and history, and subsequently historiography. Therefore it would seem logical that the 'revolutionists' (if thats a word), and the way history is written about them would be a fascinating topic with plenty of potential.
so... i was thinking of evaluating the way history is constructed about revolutionists (a much more specific aspect of this, one i will hopefully devise after some more reading) and relating this back to either Che or Trotsky. I was going to do Trotsky (mainly because im russian so can read russian sources, and my teachers think this is an advantage i should use) until i found out this morning he is extensively covered in the Modern topic (which i dont do btw), so is that going to be a problem? is he a major topic so i have to stay away from him?
Che was my second option, i would also really like to do him, probably even more so than Trotsky, and im also fluent in spanish, so the aditional reading of original sources also applies here, but my only worry was that the fact that he is so damn commercial and popular would lead my teacher to think i chose an easy topic. that just means i have to make it more complex, right? lol....any advice would be muchly appreciated guys.