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Organizing Women in Contemporary Russia

Organizing Women in Contemporary Russia

Organizing Women in Contemporary Russia

Engendering Transition
Valerie Sperling, Clark University, Massachusetts
November 1999
Paperback
9780521669634

    This book offers the first comprehensive analysis of the contemporary Russian women's movement and of the social, political, economic, historical, and international contexts that surround it. Valerie Sperling paints a vivid portrait of the women's movement's formation and development, paying particular attention to the key challenges facing a social movement in post-communist society, including the virtual absence of civil society, constant flux in political institutions, wrenching economic changes, and the movement's own status in a changing transnational environment. The author also addresses the specific challenges facing women's organizations by discussing societal attitudes towards feminism in Russia. Based on participant observation, primary source materials, and dozens of interviews conducted in Moscow (as well as two smaller Russian cities), the narrative brings alive the activists' struggle to build a social movement under difficult conditions, and sheds new light on the troubled and complex process of Russia's democratization.

    • Vivid portrait of the women's movement in Russia, looking at its formation and prospects in the new society
    • Focuses on the importance of international influences on social movements
    • Will appeal to students of women's studies and social movements, as well as Russian and post-Communist studies

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Valerie Sperling combines firsthand observation, revealing interviews, shrewd political analysis, and energetic prose to bring us a stirring account of struggles to organize women and defend their interests in a troubled country. The result is not only a close look at activism in Russia but also a distinctive contribution to comparative political studies.' Charles Tilly, Columbia University

    'Too much Western analysis of civil society in the former Soviet Union has been casual and empirically thin. Valerie Sperling's rich study of Russian women's movements will push the whole discussion forward. She persuasively shows how organizational entrepreneurs have capitalized on their new freedom, but also how they have been held back by historical legacies and by their dependency on international sources of support.' Tim Colton, Harvard University

    'Drawing on extensive interviews with women activists, Valerie Sperling provides a clear-eyed assessment and often poignant account of women's organizing in post-communist Russia. Her insightful analysis is a welcome addition to the literature, and her focus on women provides a unique window on the complex changes taking place in a country whose political future will affect us all.' Jane Jaquette, Occidental College

    ' … the book is informative and stimulating … it concludes with some imaginative suggestions … of ways in which the Russian women's movement could begin to reach out to the wider population.' The Times Literary Supplement

    'Sperling's book provides a vast amount of information about Russian women's organising. It's a good book for any feminist who's interested in Russia.' Carol Anne Douglas, Off-our-Backs

    '… it sets a new standard for scholarship on post-Soviet civil society.' The American Journal of Sociology

    'It is masterpiece of social science literature.' The Russian Review

    ' … meticulously researched and carefully argued … ' Slavonic and East European Review

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 1999
    Paperback
    9780521669634
    316 pages
    229 × 152 × 18 mm
    0.47kg
    1 map 7 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Russian women's movement groups and activists
    • 2. Analyzing social movements
    • 3. Feminism, femininity, and sexism: socio-cultural opportunities and obstacles to women's movement organizing
    • 4. Democracy without women is not democracy: political opportunities and obstacles to women's movement organizing
    • 5. Unemployment has a woman's face: economic opportunities and obstacles to women's movement organizing
    • 6. Remembrance of things past: the impact of political history on women's movement organizing
    • 7. International influences on the Russian women's movement
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • Valerie Sperling , Clark University, Massachusetts