Making Workers Soviet: Power, Class, and Identity

Предна корица
Lewis H. Siegelbaum, Ronald Grigor Suny
Cornell University Press, 1994 - 399 страници

Drawing on such diverse sources as propaganda art, the trade union press, workers' memoirs, and materials in recently opened Soviet archives, this is the first book to examine the shifting identity of the "working class" in late tsarist and early Soviet societies. New essays by fifteen leading historians show how Russian workers responded to attempts to make them Soviet.

Initial chapters consider power relations and working-class identity in imperial Russia. The effects of the revolutionary upheavals of 1917 to 1921 on labor relations among printers and coal miners are then discussed. Addressing subsequent decades, other essays document the situation of cotton workers and white-collar workers embroiled within the ambiguities of the New Economic Policy or challenge the appropriateness of "class" analysis for the Stalin era. Additional chapters reconstruct workers' responses to the Great Purges and trace the significance of class in visual and verbal discourse. Making Workers Soviet will be central to the current rethinking of Soviet history and of class formation in noncapitalist settings.

Contributors: Victoria E. Bonnell; Sheila Fitzpatrick; Heather Hogan; Diane P. Koenker; Stephen Kotkin; Hiroaki Kuromiya; Moshe Lewin; Daniel Orlovsky; Gabor T. Rittersporn; Lewis H. Siegelbaum; S. A. Smith; Mark D. Steinberg; Ronald Grigor Suny; Chris Ward; Reginald E. Zelnik

 

Съдържание

Class Backwards? In Search of the Soviet Working Class I
1
Life Histories and Identities of Some
27
Vanguard Workers and the Morality of Class
66
Class Formation in the St Petersburg Metalworking
85
Workers against Foremen in St Petersburg 19051917
113
Donbas Miners in War Revolution and Civil War
138
Class Values
159
Languages of Trade or a Language of Class? Work Culture
194
WhiteCollar Workers in the Soviet
220
On Politics
253
Workers Lives in Stalins Showcase
274
The Impact of the Great Purges
311
The Iconography of the Worker in Soviet Political Art
341
Concluding Remarks
376
Contributors
391
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Информация за автора (1994)

Lewis H. Siegelbaum is Jack and Margaret Sweet Professor Emeritus of History at Michigan State University. His books include Stakhanovism and the Politics of Productivity in the USSR, 1935-1941, and the award-winning Cars for Comrades. He co-authored with Jim von Geldern the award-winning website "Seventeen Moments in Soviet History," Stalinism as a Way of Life with Andrei Sokolov, and Broad is My Native Land: Repertoires and Regimes of Migration in Russia's Twentieth Century with Leslie Page Moch. Ronald Grigor Suny is William H. Sewell Jr. Distinguished University Professor of History at the University of Michigan and the author most recently of "They Can Live in the Desert But Nowhere Else:" A History of the Armenian Genocide.

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