Women in Soviet society
6 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
"From the earliest years of the Soviet regime, deliberate transformation of the role of women in economic, political, and family life aimed at incorporating female mobilization into a larger strategy of national development. Addressing a neglected problem in the literature on modernization, the author brings an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of the motivations, mechanisms, and consequences of the official Soviet commitment to female liberation, and its implications for the role of women in Soviet society today. She argues that Soviet policy was shaped less by the individualistic and libertarian concerns of nineteenth-century feminism or Marxism than by a strategy of modernization in which the transformation of women's roles was perceived by the Soviet leadership as the means of tapping a major economic and political resource. Bringing together the available data, the author analyzes the scope and limits of sexual equality in the Soviet system, and at the same time places the Soviet pattern in a broader historical and comparative perspective."--Jacket.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Margaret Jordan
Abingdon's Banners for African American Churches
Interesting Trial of Edward Jo
Interesting Trial of Edward Jordan and Margaret His Wife [microform]
Soviet women at war
Soviet women at war
The law handbook (WA)
The law handbook (WA)
The story of Compton Bishop an
The story of Compton Bishop and Cross
Woman in Soviet society
Woman in Soviet society