ABSTRACT

The Russian Revolution of 1917 has often been presented as a complete break with the past, with everything which had gone before swept away, and all aspects of politics, economy, and society reformed and made new. Recently, however, historians have increasingly come to question this view, discovering that Tsarist Russia was much more entangled in the processes of modernisation, and that the new regime contained much more continuity than has previously been acknowledged. This book presents new research findings on a range of different aspects of Russian society, both showing how there was much change before 1917, and much continuity afterwards; and also going beyond this to show that the new Soviet regime established in the 1920s, with its vision of the New Soviet Person, was in fact based on a complicated mixture of new Soviet thinking and ideas developed before 1917 by a variety of non-Bolshevik movements.

chapter

Crossing the divide

Tradition, rupture, and modernity in revolutionary Russia

part I|100 pages

The new state, the past, and the people

chapter 1|25 pages

The problem of persistence

chapter 2|21 pages

How revolutionary was revolutionary justice?

Legal culture in Russia across the revolutionary divide

chapter 3|25 pages

‘Taking a leap across the tsarist throne’

Revolutionizing the Russian circus

part II|133 pages

The people, the past, and the new state

chapter 5|29 pages

For the people

The image of Ukrainian teachers as public servants

chapter 6|21 pages

‘The woman of the Orient is not the voiceless slave anymore’

The non-Russian women of Volga-Ural region and ‘women’s question’

chapter 7|15 pages

Devotion and revolution

Nursing values

chapter 9|22 pages

Speaking more than Bolshevik

Humour, subjectivity, and crosshatching in Stalin’s 1930s

chapter |16 pages

Epilogue

The Russian tradition? Discourses of tradition and modernity