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The Baba and the Comrade: Gender and Politics in Revolutionary Russia
 
 
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The Baba and the Comrade: Gender and Politics in Revolutionary Russia [Paperback]

Elizabeth A. Wood (Author)

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Book Description

Indiana-Michigan Series in Russian and East European Studies January 1, 2001

"Meticulously researched, impressively documented, and engrossingly written,... [it] contributes to a long-overdue reconception of the New Economic Policy (NEP)...." —Choice

"... a well-organized, sophisticated analysis of the difficulties involved in attempting to reconcile ideology with political, economic, and cultural realities.: —The Russian Review

"... a highly persuasive, revealing, and well-documented account of early Bolshevik policy, practice, and language pertaining to the 'baba problem' and the unexpected ways female and male comrades responded to the party-state's tutelary role toward women." —Slavic Review

"This is a rich and densely argued study that embeds the story of the zhenotdel in the context of the political struggles and institutional structures of this formative period of the Russian Revolution. Wood demonstrates clearly the dilemma of whether women party activists should serve the party or their constituents." —American Historical Review

"Wood's convincing work is a welcome addition to the growing literature on the gender-role traditionalism the Communists reinstitutionalized with their revolution." —The Women's Review of Books

How could the baba—traditionally, the "backward" Russian woman—be mobilized as a "comrade" in the construction of a new state and society? Drawing on recently opened archives, Elizabeth A. Wood explains why the Bolsheviks proved unable and ultimately unwilling to realize their ideological notions of a gender-neutral society. Focusing on the creation and activities of the zhenotdel, a special women's section within the Russian Communist Party, Wood reconstructs the ways in which notions of gender sameness and difference both facilitated and complicated Bolshevik efforts at state building during the Civil War and the New Economic Policy.


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The Baba and the Comrade: Gender and Politics in Revolutionary Russia + Russia After the War: Hopes, Illusions, and Disappointments, 1945-1957 (New Russian History) + Experiencing Russia's Civil War: Politics, Society, and Revolutionary Culture in Saratov, 1917-1922
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Editorial Reviews

Review

" ... a highly persuasive, revealing, and well-documented account of early Bolshevik policy, practice, and language pertaining to the 'baba problem' and the unexpected ways female and male comrades responded to the party-state's tutelary role toward women." --Slavic Review "... a well-organised, sophisticated analysis of the difficulties involved in attempting to reconcile ideology with political, economic, and cultural realities." --The Russian Review "Meticulously researched, impressively documented, and engrossingly written, [the] work is much more than an examination of the successes, tribulations, and obstacles experienced by the zhenotdely (Soviet women's sections)... contributes to a long-overdue reconception of the New Economic Policy" Choice " ... a well-organised, sophisticated analysis of the difficulties involved in attempting to reconcile ideology with political, economic, and cultural realities." --The Russian Review " ... a highly persuasive, revealing, and well-documented account of early Bolshevik policy, practice, and language pertaining to the "baba problem" and the unexpected ways female and male comrades responded to the party-state's tutelary role toward women." --Slavic Review "This is a rich and densely argued study that embeds the story of the zhenotdel in the context of the political struggles and institutional structures of this formative period of the Russian Revolution. Wood demonstrates clearly the dilemma of whether women party activists should serve the party or their constituents." --American Historical Review "Wood's convincing work is a welcome addition to the growing literature on the gender-role traditionalism the Communists reinstitutionalized with their revolution." --The Women's Review of Books "Wood enriches the existing tradition of women's history by focusing not only on the experience of real women's lives, but also on 'gender as an organising principle.' ... This book will be of particular interest to specialists in and students of the early Soviet state and gender studies." --H- Russia

About the Author

Elizabeth A. Wood is Associate Professor of History at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
If there was a specter haunting Europe in the 1920s, it was that of the New Woman. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Red Army, Soviet Russia, Communist Party, Bolshevik Revolution, Aleksandra Kollontai, Inessa Armand, World War, Soviet Union, Eleventh Party Congress, Women's Liberation Movement, Social Democrats, Tenth Party Congress, Central Council of Trade Unions, Russian Review, Sofiia Smidovich, Ann Arbor, October Revolution, Peter the Great, Sheila Fitzpatrick, Labor Commissariat, Ninth Party Congress, Slavic Review, Twelfth Party Congress, Clara Zetkin
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