Between the Fields and the City: Women, Work, and Family in Russia, 1861-1914

Between the Fields and the City: Women, Work, and Family in Russia, 1861-1914

by Barbara Alpern Engel (Author)

Synopsis

This book charts the personal dimensions of economic social change by examining the significance and consequences of Russian peasant women's migration from the village to the factory and/or city in the years between the emancipation of the serfs in 1861 and the outbreak of World War I. The author uses case studies to explore the effects of urbanisation and industrialisation on the relationship of the migrant to the peasant household, and on family life and personal relations. It differs from other studies in looking at both village and city; in the treatment of personal life, and in drawing on a wealth of archival data, most of it for the first time. The focus on women and the family provides a fresh perspective on the social history of late Imperial Russia.

$29.72

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 29 Mar 1996

ISBN 10: 0521566215
ISBN 13: 9780521566216

Media Reviews
The chief contribution of Barbara Engel's important and groundbreaking study of peasant women in Russia's central industrial region lies in the sheer mass of detail the author provides for a theme rarely studied and little understood. Drawing on an impressive array of published and unpublished sources....Engel's sensitive treatment of the varying ways in which gender, class, and community together affected women's lives saves peasant women from being relegated to a special category with little relevance to the society in which they lived. Slavic Review
This book is a superbly researched and finely written study of the significance and consequences of Russian peasant women's migration from 1861-1914. It adds a new dimension to the growing literature on peasant migration and the formation of the Russian working class by analyzing how migration affected the village, how gender mediated change, and how the very structure of partriarchal society, whether in village, cottage industry, or urban environment, were affected by changes in women's employment and residency. Journal of Modern History
Alpern Engel's book is a helpful tool for those interested in deciphering the history of Russian women in particular and of peasant women in general. Its value lies in its use of peasant women's own voices to tell the story of their lives. By using this method, Alpern Engel is able to avoid the essentialist trap and to convey the rich diversity of peasant women's experiences of migration and industrialization. Canadian Woman Studies
...her study is rich in both erudition and insight. It treats a complex subject in depth, but efficiently; the exposition is never compressed or hurried. Historians of imperial Russia, of women, and of labor will have to read this book and will be glad they did. American Historical Review
...a valuable contribution to the nascent field of Russian peasant women's studies. Labour
This is an excellent book in the questions Barbara Alpern Engel poses, the research she has accomplished, the presentation of her argument, and her intellectual generosity. The Russian Review
This book adds new dimensions to the social history of late Imperial Russia... Canadian Slavic Paper
This absorbing, well-written study is highly recommended for academic and public libraries collecting Russian history and women's studies. Donna Cole, Library Journal
With its readable prose and its emphasis on the life experiences of individual, poor women, this book makes an excellent introduction to its subject. J. Zimmerman, Choice
Engel's book is a valuable contribution to our understanding of peasant culture, gender, urbanization, and the circumstances faced by Russia's working class. Her perceptive and sensitive use of disparate sources, including comparative works on women in Europe and fascinating archival evidence for the experiences of individual female peasants, is particularly noteworthy. Engel also sheds light on the perplexing issue of working women's limited political involvement. Laurie Bernstein, Labor History