Revolution of Their Own

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Author: Barbara Engel

ISBN-10: 0813333660

ISBN-13: 9780813333663

Category: Historical Biography - Russia & Soviet Union

The stories of these eight Russian women offer an extremely rare perspective into personal life in the Soviet era. Some were from the poor peasantry and working class, groups in whose name the revolution was carried out and who sometimes gained unprecedented opportunities after the revolution. Others, born to “misfortune” as the daughters of nobles, parish priests, or those peasants termed well-to-do, suffered bitterly as enemies to a new government. The women interviewed here speak candidly...

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This groundbreaking collection is the first book to present the history of women in the Soviet era by bringing together firsthand accounts of Russian women and their lives. The eight women interviewed for this book represent diverse social backgrounds and geographical regions—but all were born before the Bolshevik revolution, a generation intimately familiar with the world’s first attempt to create a socialist society and to promise full emancipation for women. Their narratives vividly illustrate both the difficulties posed by such extreme social instability and the vastly expanded opportunity for women in Soviet Russia. Booknews Interviews with eight Soviet women, some from the poor peasantry and working class in whose name the revolution was carried out, and others born to money and so enemies to the new government. They speak about family life, work, sexual relations, marriage and divorce, childbirth and child rearing, and legalized abortion and the underground pursuit of such services after abortion was outlawed in 1936. They reveal the new opportunities that opened for women and the reality of their daily lives. Paper edition (unseen), $20.00. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

AcknowledgmentsGlossaryIntroduction1Living Someone Else's Life17Taking Advantage of New Opportunities47Daughter of a Village Priest85Overcoming an "Incorrect" Birth101A Life in a Peasant Village117From Peasant to Journalist132Under a Sword of Damocles155Four Years as a Frontline Physician175Afterword: Evaluating the Soviet Experience219On Choices, Methods, and Silences222Selected Bibliography229Index231

\ BooknewsInterviews with eight Soviet women, some from the poor peasantry and working class in whose name the revolution was carried out, and others born to money and so enemies to the new government. They speak about family life, work, sexual relations, marriage and divorce, childbirth and child rearing, and legalized abortion and the underground pursuit of such services after abortion was outlawed in 1936. They reveal the new opportunities that opened for women and the reality of their daily lives. Paper edition (unseen), $20.00. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.\ \