Late-Imperial Russia: An Interpretation
Three Visions, Two Cultures, One Peasantry
©1997
Monographs
457 Pages
Summary
Late-Imperial Russia deals with some of the great questions of modern Russian history. It uses methods of intellectual history, political economy, ethnography and quantitative history to analyse the Peasant Question in late- Imperial Russia. A study of ideas in action, the book is unique in letting all key participants speak: the intelligentsia, the state and the peasantry. It analyses their opinions, rôles and actions, explaining understandings of the fate of the peasants and the future of Russia. Key intellectual, political, demographic and socio-economic trends are assessed in tandem. Late-Imperial Russia is revealed as a deeply-divided society of three visions and two cultures, each dismissing and misconceiving the other. This unusual contrast of the cultures, ideas and actions of the state, the peasantry and the intelligentsia shows who really wielded power in the crucial decades between the Emancipation and the Revolution. Cross-cultural misunderstandings emerging in the last decades of the Imperial era helped shape the instabilities of the Revolutions of 1917-1921 and their Stalinist aftermath.
Details
- Pages
- 457
- Publication Year
- 1997
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9783906757124
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- history political economy ethnography Revolution Emancipation
- Published
- Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., New York, Paris, Wien, 1997. 457 pp.