Women in the Revolution and the USSR
MTA
Gender, Labor, and Family from 1905 to Perestroika
2nd Edition
This book provides a comprehensive social and political-economic history of women in the Soviet Union, tracing the trajectory of gender relations from the 1905 Revolution to the collapse of the USSR in 1991. It examines the central paradox of the Soviet project: a state that constitutionally enshrined gender equality and mobilized women as indispensable workers and soldiers, yet simultaneously relied on their unpaid domestic labor to sustain the national economy. By exploring the "double burden"—the expectation that women excel in both professional production and household reproduction—the text illustrates how state policies regarding labor, family law, and housing often reinforced traditional hierarchies even as they opened new doors for female education and professionalization.
The narrative is structured chronologically, beginning with the radical legal experiments of the 1920s, such as the legalization of abortion and "divorce on demand," which sought to dismantle patriarchal imperial structures. This early idealism shifted during the 1930s "Great Retreat," when the state adopted pronatalist and maternalist policies to stabilize the social order during the upheavals of industrialization and collectivization. The book highlights the pivotal role of women during the Great Patriotic War, where they served in unprecedented combat and industrial roles, only to face a complicated demobilization process that attempted to return them to domestic life while maintaining their participation in the postwar reconstruction.
Throughout the later decades, the book analyzes the impact of the Khrushchev "Thaw" and the Brezhnev era of "Stagnation" on the lived experience of Soviet women. It details the expansion of the service sector and professions like medicine and science, which became feminized yet remained undervalued. A significant focus is placed on the "informal economy" and social networks; as state services and consumer supplies faltered, women utilized "blat" (favors) and neighborly solidarity to manage chronic shortages and the "crisis of care." The text also emphasizes that "Soviet womanhood" was not a monolith, exploring the distinct cultural and national negotiations faced by women in Central Asia, the Baltics, and other peripheries.
The final chapters chronicle the unraveling of the Soviet gender contract during Perestroika. As glasnost allowed for the candid discussion of social failures, the economic restructuring led to the re-privatization of care, shifting the costs of a collapsing welfare state onto individual women. By 1991, the promise of state-sponsored emancipation vanished alongside the Union, leaving a legacy of professional achievement tempered by systemic exhaustion. Ultimately, the book argues that the Soviet experiment cannot be understood without placing women’s labor—both seen and unseen—at the structural core of its development and eventual decline.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of Soviet/Russian history, gender studies, and women's history who seek a nuanced analysis of how state policies shaped women's lives across decades of revolution, war, and reform. It will particularly benefit researchers interested in socialist labor systems, family policy, and the intersection of politics with everyday life, as well as readers looking to understand the lived consequences of emancipation promises in a multiethnic state. Those studying comparative gender history or the social history of 20th-century Eurasia will find its detailed examination of regional variations and informal economies especially valuable.
May 2, 2026
67,765 words
4 hours 45 minutes
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