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The Sibiriachka Encounters Revolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Extract

In sweeping away the Tsarist political empire, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 also challenged a way of life. It provided opportunities for women in Siberia, the Sibiriachki, and in the rest of Russia, to change their lives. The revolution's democratic and Marxian socialist policies, carried to these women by the zhenotdel, determined officials in the women's department of the Communist Party, created wide possibilities for change. This essay examines Siberian women's responses—both negative and positive—to the revolution's teachings about women's rights and their equality with men. Women's cultural backgrounds—ethnic, educational, urban and rural—influenced their responses to the revolutionary call to claim their rights, their successes and failures in efforts to defend themselves from violence, their efforts to achieve health care and education, and their progress toward greater political and economic equality. This essay also explores conditions on the eve of the revolution, illustrating the variety of strata existing in Siberia's vast lands. It discusses the significant advances in women's self-awareness and their changing activities in the early and mid-1920s. The Party's political mobilization of women expanded into a critique of the social status quo. Subsequently, in the late 1920s and 1930s, the context for their activities was radically altered: political and social criticism were no longer acceptable. For women the gains of the revolution were corrupted and women lost more than they had previously gained. While one can see the throttling of the women's revolution as an indication of its fundamental weakness, one can also see it as the Party's response to a movement that was gaining strength and raising questions about the Party's primacy.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1997 Association for the Study of Nationalities of Eastern Europe 

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References

Notes

1. Basargin, V., Zapiski (Petrograd, 1917); 94 cited in Anatole Mazour, The First Russian Revolution, 1825 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press (Reprint), 1967), p. 224.Google Scholar

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3. Spireva, Tat'iana Ivanovna, “Vospominaniia kommunistki,” Sibir', No. 3, 1971, pp. 6078.Google Scholar

4. PATO 1/1/1749/18.Google Scholar

5. Halle, Fannina W., Women in the Soviet East, trans. by Green, Margaret M. (London: Martin Secker and Warburg Ltd., 1938).Google Scholar

6. Spireva, Tat'iana Ivanovna, “Vospominaniia kommunistki,” Sibir', No. 3, 1971, pp. 6078.Google Scholar

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8. Krasnaia Sibiriachka, No. 4/5, 1922.Google Scholar

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14. PATO 1/1/1749/17.Google Scholar

15. Khamarmer, “Klassovaia bor'ba za novye sovety,” Prosvechenie Sibiri, No. 5, 1929, pp. 712.Google Scholar

16. , Sibkraikom Chetvertaia Sibirskaia Kraevaia Konferentsiia, Vypusk 3-1 (Novosibirsk: Sibkraiizdat, 1929).Google Scholar

17. Ibid. Google Scholar

18. Women's right to abortion, once an important sign of their independence, had been increasingly restricted, and in 1936 abortions became illegal. Wendy, Z. Goldman, Women, the State and Revolution (New York City: Cambridge University Press, 1993).Google Scholar

19. Baianova, Mansilaia, Kuznetsk Metallurgical Combine archive, No. 143.Google Scholar

20. Maria Pavlovna Lemeshkina, unpublished mss.Google Scholar