Social Basis of the Female Question

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20th century history
A01=Alexandra Kollontai
Author_Alexandra Kollontai
Category=JBSF11
Category=JPF
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTV
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminism
feminist history
Feminist theory
gender equality
gender studies
intersectionality
Marxism
Marxist feminism
people's history
revolutionary history
Russian history
women's equality
women's history
women's oppression
working class history

Product details

  • ISBN 9798888904367
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Haymarket Books
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The first full-length English translation of the 1909 book from the revolutionary Russian Marxist feminist Alexandra Kollontai on the state of the contemporary bourgeois women’s movement and the role of working-class women in the struggle for women’s equality.

In this classic text from 1909, Alexandra Kollontai, a leading early figure in the Marxist feminist movement, discusses the history and socioeconomic roots of the struggle for women’s equality. Examining the movement for women’s equality in late 19th century Russia, she discusses how upper-class liberal feminists ignored or patronized working-class women. The interests of upper-class women and their focus on suffrage and philanthropy meant that their organizations and movements could not be reliable allies to women of the working class.

Many of the issues that Kollontai touches on in this book remain alive today, as the struggle for gender equality is dominated by liberal bourgeois groups while revolutionary leftists attempt to address intersecting systems of oppression without being co-opted by neoliberal feminism. Kollontai’s argument that the feminist movement needs to be part of broader working class struggles for liberation is as important and powerful today as it was in the early twentieth century.

Alexandra Kollontai (1872-1952) was a Russian revolutionary, politician, diplomat and Marxist thinker. Serving as the People's Commissar for Welfare in Vladimir Lenin's government in 1917-1918, she was a highly prominent woman within the Bolshevik party and the first woman in history to become an official member of a governing cabinet. She worked tirelessly all her life as a speaker, writer, and organizer for women's emancipation.  Élise Hendrick has been working as a freelance translator of a wide variety of medical, legal, technical, literary, and political material since the late 1990s. Her working languages include Russian, Japanese, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Norwegian, Dutch, Portuguese, English, Swedish, Danish, Flemish, Afrikaans, Bosnian, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Korean, Catalan, and Yiddish, and are likely to expand soon to include Chinese (simplified and traditional) and Finnish.

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