Soviet Women in Combat: A History of Violence on the Eastern Front
Autor Anna Krylovaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 sep 2011
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
---|---|---|
Paperback (1) | 197.83 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
Cambridge University Press – 29 sep 2011 | 197.83 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
Hardback (1) | 685.88 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
Cambridge University Press – 14 mar 2010 | 685.88 lei 6-8 săpt. |
Preț: 197.83 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 297
Preț estimativ în valută:
37.87€ • 39.37$ • 31.40£
37.87€ • 39.37$ • 31.40£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 17-31 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781107699403
ISBN-10: 1107699401
Pagini: 338
Dimensiuni: 157 x 231 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1107699401
Pagini: 338
Dimensiuni: 157 x 231 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Introduction: the woman veteran as a World War II memoirist; Part I. Before the Front, 1930s: 1. A portrait of a young woman as the citizen soldier: the 'prewar generation' in popular culture, in school, and at the shooting range; Part II. On the Way to the Front, 1941–5: 2. 'And this is exactly who we are - soldiers!': Women volunteers, local authorities, and the Stalinist government in 1941; 3. The exceptional mobilization of 1941: the making of a female combat collective by state order; 4. New gender landscapes for the army: from grassroots enlistments to the state-run mobilizations of 1942–5; Part III. At the Front, 1941–5: 5. Partners in violence: the woman soldier and the machine in the 1941 trenches; 6. 'To be a woman-commander - that was great!: remechanizing and regendering in the Red Army, 1942–5; 7. Bonded by combat: women and men sharing violence, authority, and romance in mechanized warfare, 1942–5; Conclusion; Appendix.
Recenzii
Reviews of the hardback: 'In this brilliant book, Anna Krylova rediscovers a cohort of heroic Soviet Nazi fighting women, reconstructs the documentable yet obscure Stalinist policy that shaped and fulfilled the female fighters' desires to become mechanized warriors, and establishes the role Stalinist culture – what she terms the 'ambiguous cultural and institutional terrain of Stalinism' – played in creating an internally contradictory Communist modern, statist gendered order. Krylova … opens this book to a nonspecialist reader like me and points in the direction of a truly global history of the longest revolution.' Tani Barlow, Rice University
'Soviet women played an extraordinary role in World War II. Their counterparts in other countries served as military auxiliaries; in the USSR many women fought in the front lines of the ground war or took a direct part in the air fighting, and many of them were killed in action. Anna Krylova's book is the first to systematically study this, and her scope extends to the prewar social and gender context and to the postwar telling of the story. Soviet Women in Combat makes an important contribution to the social history of the war and is also a milestone in the gender history of Stalinist and post-Stalinist Russia.' Evan Mawdsley, University of Glasgow
'Anna Krylova has already established herself as one of the most important voices among a new generation of Soviet historians. Now her Soviet Women in Combat offers a pathbreaking interpretation of perhaps the formative era in modern Russian/Soviet history – the Second World War. Krylova is not the first scholar to note that women fought with the Red Army, but she asks new questions about them, combining military, cultural, and gender history in novel and even unsettling ways. The book focuses on the experiences of (and stories about) roughly 120,000 Soviet women combatants – snipers and pilots, anti-tank fighters, and others – to show how, amid this crucible of combat, they created a range of possibilities for thinking differently about gender, about personal identities and social roles, and about the place of violence in a modern and mechanized world.' Douglas Northrop, University of Michigan
'In this extraordinary study of Soviet women in combat, Anna Krylova has with great sensitivity taken a myriad of varied sources (letters, diaries, fiction, films) to produce striking insights into the discourse of gender, war, and women … This book is pathbreaking – rich and textured in its depiction of the various incidents and episodes of women's experiences and male-female contacts. Krylova gives us women as warriors who are still women.' Ronald Grigor Suny, University of Michigan
'The combat performances of Soviet women during the war were so extraordinary that they actually have posed problems for historians. The literature so far has done little more than enthusiastically champion their courage. Krylova's achievement is to approach these women's military careers from the perspective of highly sophisticated questions concerning identity, gender, and change … Despite the theoretical sophistication of Soviet Women in Combat, she is a masterful storyteller who has not lost touch with the magic of her subject. The reader walks away with not only a more subtle understanding of gender transformation but also a vivid sense of these women's courage and sense of adventure.' Mary Louise Roberts, University of Wisconsin, Madison
'… Anna Krylova has certainly posed provocative, important, questions about gender, the state, Stalinist or otherwise, and modern warfare, which will undoubtedly resonate with contemporary discussions about women and war.' Roger D. Markwick, The Russian Review
'Soviet women played an extraordinary role in World War II. Their counterparts in other countries served as military auxiliaries; in the USSR many women fought in the front lines of the ground war or took a direct part in the air fighting, and many of them were killed in action. Anna Krylova's book is the first to systematically study this, and her scope extends to the prewar social and gender context and to the postwar telling of the story. Soviet Women in Combat makes an important contribution to the social history of the war and is also a milestone in the gender history of Stalinist and post-Stalinist Russia.' Evan Mawdsley, University of Glasgow
'Anna Krylova has already established herself as one of the most important voices among a new generation of Soviet historians. Now her Soviet Women in Combat offers a pathbreaking interpretation of perhaps the formative era in modern Russian/Soviet history – the Second World War. Krylova is not the first scholar to note that women fought with the Red Army, but she asks new questions about them, combining military, cultural, and gender history in novel and even unsettling ways. The book focuses on the experiences of (and stories about) roughly 120,000 Soviet women combatants – snipers and pilots, anti-tank fighters, and others – to show how, amid this crucible of combat, they created a range of possibilities for thinking differently about gender, about personal identities and social roles, and about the place of violence in a modern and mechanized world.' Douglas Northrop, University of Michigan
'In this extraordinary study of Soviet women in combat, Anna Krylova has with great sensitivity taken a myriad of varied sources (letters, diaries, fiction, films) to produce striking insights into the discourse of gender, war, and women … This book is pathbreaking – rich and textured in its depiction of the various incidents and episodes of women's experiences and male-female contacts. Krylova gives us women as warriors who are still women.' Ronald Grigor Suny, University of Michigan
'The combat performances of Soviet women during the war were so extraordinary that they actually have posed problems for historians. The literature so far has done little more than enthusiastically champion their courage. Krylova's achievement is to approach these women's military careers from the perspective of highly sophisticated questions concerning identity, gender, and change … Despite the theoretical sophistication of Soviet Women in Combat, she is a masterful storyteller who has not lost touch with the magic of her subject. The reader walks away with not only a more subtle understanding of gender transformation but also a vivid sense of these women's courage and sense of adventure.' Mary Louise Roberts, University of Wisconsin, Madison
'… Anna Krylova has certainly posed provocative, important, questions about gender, the state, Stalinist or otherwise, and modern warfare, which will undoubtedly resonate with contemporary discussions about women and war.' Roger D. Markwick, The Russian Review
Notă biografică
Descriere
Soviet Women in Combat explores the unprecedented historical phenomenon of Soviet women's en masse volunteering for World War II combat.