Living Through the Soviet System

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A01=Leo Lowenthal
A01=Paul Thompson
anna
Anna Rotkirch
Author_Leo Lowenthal
Author_Paul Thompson
Category=NHD
Common Language
Communal Flat
Communal Yard
Daniel Bertaux
Ekaterina Foteeva
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
everyday life communism
Extended Mothering
family dynamics USSR
Gender Contract
Gulag Archipelago
Gulag Survivors
Igor Smirnov
Irina Korovushkina Paert
Kulak Families
Late Soviet Years
Learned Ignorance
Life Story Interviews
Marianne Liljestrom
Marina Malysheva
Mole Cricket
Nanci Adler
Naomi Roslyn Galtz
Nizhnii Tagil
Paul Thompson
personal narratives Soviet experience
postwar Russian society
qualitative interviews
rotkirch
Russian social structure
Sexual Revolution
Small Freedoms
Soviet Gender Contract
Soviet oral history
Soviet Women
Twentieth Party Congress
Victoria Semenova
White Sea Baltic Canal
Woman's Autobiography
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412804875
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jan 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For a period of over seventy years after the 1917 revolutions in Russia, talking about the past, either political or personal, became dangerous. The situation changed dramatically with the new policy of glasnost at the end of the 1980s. The result was a flood of reminiscence, almost nightly on television, and more formally collected by new Russian oral history groups and also by Western researchers. Daniel Bertaux and Paul Thompson both began collecting life story and family history interview material in the early 1990s, and this book is the outcome of their initiative. Living Through the Soviet System analyzes, through personal accounts, how Russian society operated on a day-to-day level. It contrasts the integration of different social groups: the descendents of the pre-revolutionary upper classes, the new industrial working class, or the ethnically marginalized Russian Jews. It examines in turn the implications of family relationships, working mothers, absent fathers and caretaking grandmothers; patterns of eating together, and of housing; the secrecy of sex; the suppression of religion; and the small freedoms of growing vegetables on weekends on a dacha plot. Because of its basis in direct testimonies, the book reveals in a highly readable and direct style the meaning for ordinary men and women of living through those seven dark decades of a great European nation. Because of the centrality of Soviet Russia to the history of the twentieth-century world, this book will be of interest to a wide range of readers. It will be of importance to students, researchers and teachers of history and sociology, as well as specialists in East European and other communist societies.

Daniel Bertaux is directeur de recherches at the Centre d'Etudes des Mouvements Sociaux, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. Paul Thompson is research professor in sociology at the University of Essex and fellow at the Institute of Community Studies in London. Anna Rotkirch is a lecturer in sociology at the University of Helsinki.

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