Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Better halves’? Representations of women in Russian urban popular entertainments, 1870-1910
- 2 The Silver Age: highpoint for women?
- 3 Women pharmacists in Russia before World War I: women's emancipation, feminism, professionalization, nationalism and class conflict
- 4 Women's rights, civil rights and the debate over citizenship in the 1905 Revolution
- 5 Laying the foundations of democracy in Russia: E. D. Kuskova's contribution, February–October 1917
- 6 Mariia L. Bochkareva and the Russian amazons of 1917
- 7 Russian women writers: an overview. Post-revolutionary dispersion and adjustment
- 8 Victim or villain? Prostitution in post-revolutionary Russia
- 9 Young women and perestroika
- 10 Glasnost and the woman question
- Index
5 - Laying the foundations of democracy in Russia: E. D. Kuskova's contribution, February–October 1917
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Better halves’? Representations of women in Russian urban popular entertainments, 1870-1910
- 2 The Silver Age: highpoint for women?
- 3 Women pharmacists in Russia before World War I: women's emancipation, feminism, professionalization, nationalism and class conflict
- 4 Women's rights, civil rights and the debate over citizenship in the 1905 Revolution
- 5 Laying the foundations of democracy in Russia: E. D. Kuskova's contribution, February–October 1917
- 6 Mariia L. Bochkareva and the Russian amazons of 1917
- 7 Russian women writers: an overview. Post-revolutionary dispersion and adjustment
- 8 Victim or villain? Prostitution in post-revolutionary Russia
- 9 Young women and perestroika
- 10 Glasnost and the woman question
- Index
Summary
Like all of Russia's female revolutionaries, Ekaterina Dmitrievna Kuskova (1869–1958) forged her political career in a male-dominated oppositional movement that relegated women to a secondary, supporting role. Her forceful personality, however, along with an ability to articulate the demands of the moderate socialist and left liberal intelligentsia enabled her to overcome this marginalization and assume a place at the very centre of Russian revolutionary politics. By 1917, Kuskova had achieved considerable prominence as a non-party social democrat, well known even beyond intelligentsia circles for her work as a journalist and an activist in the cooperative movement. By this time, too, she had entered the ranks of Russian feminists as an outspoken advocate of women's rights. But it was socialism rather than feminism that informed Kuskova's politics in the period between the February and October revolutions, and she subordinated all other interests to the establishment of democracy in Russia. Moreover, throughout 1917 she continued, as she had in the past, to ignore her identity as a woman, remaining unconcerned with, if not actually unaware of, the extent to which her gender shaped her politics.
Any account of Kuskova's politics during this crucial year must remain incomplete until additional archival sources become accessible. Nevertheless, available sources are adequate to construct a fairly detailed, if still preliminary, description of her efforts to lay the foundations of democracy in the period between February and October.
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- Women and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union , pp. 101 - 123Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992
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