Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village After Collectivization
Sheila Fitzpatricken Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 dec 1996
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195104592
ISBN-10: 0195104595
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195104595
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In this pathbreaking study, Sheila Fitzpatrick portrays collective farm life in the 1930s from the perspective of the peasantry ...Stalin's Peasants is an accessible and fascinating glimpse into the Soviet countryside.
A pioneering piece of historical sociology that delineates the deplorable reality of ideological utopias.
Fitzpatrick makes her account vivid with quotations of first-person experiences, but she resists the temptation to oversimplify the issues. Highly detailed--a must for students of Soviet, or social history.
Stalin's Peasants is well-researched and richly detailed. It adds a great deal of new information on rural conditions and attitudes in the 1930s. No other work comes close to it in recounting the tragedy of collectivization from the peasant's point of view.
This is an outstanding contribution both to the history of the USSR and the social history of peasants by a remarkable historian. She makes us hear the Russian peasants of the Stalin era speak (largely via hitherto closed archival records) and the echo of their voices in post-Soviet Russia today.
Fitzpatrick's study is truly a landmark in the historiography of the Stalinist period of Soviet history, something that has been long overdue--a thickly documented social history of 1930s, not from the perspective of the "system" of Stalinism, but of the traumatic experiences and changes in life texture of that long-suffering underclass, the Russian peasantry.
With prodigious energy and diligence in newly-opened archives and employing the theoretical insights of recent historical and anthropological studies, Sheila Fitzpatrick shows how in the Russian village after collectivization peasants used the `weapons of the weak' to pry from the Stalinist state what they needed in order to survive. She tells a tragic story filled with small triumphs by the subaltern in dynamic and moving prose. This is an empirical and conceptual tour de force.
Sheila Fitzpatrick has written yet another path-breaking book, introducing us once more to an untold history and hitherto unused sources. She shows that Stalin's peasants were unmistakably kin to the peasants of Peter and Catherine, and the two Nicholases. They resisted the often unbearable pressure of the state as best they could, exploited the regime's dependence upon peasant cooperation, adopted the language of the regime as they pursued their own intravillage feuds, and remained cynically indifferent to the regime's goals.
Sheila Fitzpatrick's important Stalin's Peasants. Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization ... fills a major gap in our sources ... the first comprehensive study of the collectivized peasantry in the 1930s by a social historian. Professor Fitzpatrick has scrutinized a vast range of published and archival sources ... These rich materials have enabled her to provide a wide-ranging and well-grounded account of Soviet rural society ... this book of essays is stimulating and contains much original material.
A pioneering piece of historical sociology that delineates the deplorable reality of ideological utopias.
Fitzpatrick makes her account vivid with quotations of first-person experiences, but she resists the temptation to oversimplify the issues. Highly detailed--a must for students of Soviet, or social history.
Stalin's Peasants is well-researched and richly detailed. It adds a great deal of new information on rural conditions and attitudes in the 1930s. No other work comes close to it in recounting the tragedy of collectivization from the peasant's point of view.
This is an outstanding contribution both to the history of the USSR and the social history of peasants by a remarkable historian. She makes us hear the Russian peasants of the Stalin era speak (largely via hitherto closed archival records) and the echo of their voices in post-Soviet Russia today.
Fitzpatrick's study is truly a landmark in the historiography of the Stalinist period of Soviet history, something that has been long overdue--a thickly documented social history of 1930s, not from the perspective of the "system" of Stalinism, but of the traumatic experiences and changes in life texture of that long-suffering underclass, the Russian peasantry.
With prodigious energy and diligence in newly-opened archives and employing the theoretical insights of recent historical and anthropological studies, Sheila Fitzpatrick shows how in the Russian village after collectivization peasants used the `weapons of the weak' to pry from the Stalinist state what they needed in order to survive. She tells a tragic story filled with small triumphs by the subaltern in dynamic and moving prose. This is an empirical and conceptual tour de force.
Sheila Fitzpatrick has written yet another path-breaking book, introducing us once more to an untold history and hitherto unused sources. She shows that Stalin's peasants were unmistakably kin to the peasants of Peter and Catherine, and the two Nicholases. They resisted the often unbearable pressure of the state as best they could, exploited the regime's dependence upon peasant cooperation, adopted the language of the regime as they pursued their own intravillage feuds, and remained cynically indifferent to the regime's goals.
Sheila Fitzpatrick's important Stalin's Peasants. Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization ... fills a major gap in our sources ... the first comprehensive study of the collectivized peasantry in the 1930s by a social historian. Professor Fitzpatrick has scrutinized a vast range of published and archival sources ... These rich materials have enabled her to provide a wide-ranging and well-grounded account of Soviet rural society ... this book of essays is stimulating and contains much original material.