AO

ARCHIVO OBRERO

Michael Hickey, ed. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution.

Biblioteca /  2010-2019

Michael Hickey, editor. Competing Voices from the Russian Revolution

Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood, 2011.

xiii, 597 páginas.

CONTENTS

PREFACE

PART ONE

THE CONTEXT OF WORLD WAR I

1 – THE WAR AND POLITICAL ELITES

2 – THE WAR AND ORDINARY PEOPLE

PART TWO

FEBRUARY-JULY 1917

3 – RESPONSES TO THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION

4 – WHAT THE REVOLUTION MEANS TO ME, PART I: SOLDIERS, WORKERS, PROFESSIONALS, INDUSTRIALISTS, AND STUDENTS

5 – WHAT THE REVOLUTION MEANS TO ME, PART II: CLERGY, PEASANTS, ARISTOCRATIC LANDOWNERS, WOMEN, AND NATIONAL AND RELIGIOUS MINORITIES

6 – FLASH POINTS OF CONFLICT: THE APRIL CRISIS

7 – FLASH POINTS OF CONFLICT: THE JUNE OFFENSIVE AND THE JULY DAYS

PART THREE

JULY-OCTOBER 1917

8 – TWO PROVINCIAL STORIES

9 – PERCEPTIONS OF CRISIS IN SUMMER AND EARLY FALL

10 – FLASH POINTS OF CONFLICT: THE KORNILOV REBELLION

11 – ELECTORAL POLITICS: CAMPAIGNS FOR LOCAL DUMAS AND THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY

12 – THE SOVIETS AND THE CONSTITUTION OF STATE POWER IN SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER

PART FOUR

THE FIRST MONTHS OF SOVIET RULE, OCTOBER 1917-JANUARY 1918

13 – FLASH POINTS OF CONFLICT: THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION AND CREATION OF A BOLSHEVIK GOVERNMENT

14 – FLASH POINTS OF CONFLICT: THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY

END MATTER