New Soviet Gypsies

New Soviet Gypsies
Author: Brigid O'Keeffe
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 476
Release: 2013-12-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 1442665874

As perceived icons of indifferent marginality, disorder, indolence, and parasitism, “Gypsies” threatened the Bolsheviks’ ideal of New Soviet Men and Women. The early Soviet state feared that its Romani population suffered from an extraordinary and potentially insurmountable cultural “backwardness,” and sought to sovietize Roma through a range of nation-building projects. Yet as Brigid O’Keeffe shows in this book, Roma actively engaged with Bolshevik nationality policies, thereby assimilating Soviet culture, social customs, and economic relations. Roma proved the primary agents in the refashioning of so-called “backwards Gypsies” into conscious Soviet citizens. New Soviet Gypsies provides a unique history of Roma, an overwhelmingly understudied and misunderstood diasporic people, by focusing on their social and political lives in the early Soviet Union. O’Keeffe illustrates how Roma mobilized and performed “Gypsiness” as a means of advancing themselves socially, culturally, and economically as Soviet citizens. Exploring the intersection between nationality, performance, and self-fashioning, O’Keeffe shows that Roma not only defy easy typecasting, but also deserve study as agents of history.

The Affirmative Action Empire

The Affirmative Action Empire
Author: Terry Dean Martin
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 532
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780801486777

This text provides a survey of the Soviet management of the nationalities question. It traces the conflicts and tensions created by the geographic definition of national territories, the establishment of several official national languages and the world's first mass "affirmative action" programmes.

Russian Citizenship

Russian Citizenship
Author: Eric Lohr
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2012-10-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 0674067800

In the first book to trace the Russian state’s citizenship policy throughout its history, Lohr argues that to understand the citizenship dilemmas Russia faces today, we must return to the less xenophobic and isolationist pre-Stalin period—before the drive toward autarky after 1914 eventually sealed the state off from Europe.

The Last Empire

The Last Empire
Author: Robert Conquest
Publisher: Hoover Press
Total Pages: 564
Release: 2017-07-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 0817982531

The historical background, the present position, and the future prospects of both the non-Russian and Russian peoples are considered in their many aspects, as are the maneuvers of the Communist regime to suppress, appease, or make use of them. The future of the Soviet Union, and thus of the world, depends greatly on whether, and how, the Communist leadership, whose own ideology has lost most of its appeal, can adjust to a new surge of national feeling. The authors examine the question from many points of view, in a broad conspectus of political, cultural, economic, demographic, and other approaches.

Red Nations

Red Nations
Author: Jeremy Smith
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 413
Release: 2013-09-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 0521111315

This book surveys the experiences of non-Russian USSR citizens both during and following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The Nationalities Problem & Soviet Administration

The Nationalities Problem & Soviet Administration
Author: Rudolf Schlesinger
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2013-11-05
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1136281274

First Published in 1998. This is Volume V of eight in the Sociology of the Soviet Union series. Collated in 1956, this is a collection of selected readings and documents about the development of Soviet Nationalites Policies.

Constructing Ethnopolitics in the Soviet Union

Constructing Ethnopolitics in the Soviet Union
Author: D. Zisserman-Brodsky
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2003-07-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1403973628

The 'nationality question' was long central to Soviet thought and policy, and the failure to provide a convincing answer played a major role in the break-up of the Soviet Union into ethnically or nationally defined states. Zisserman-Brodsky explores various explanations of nationalism and its resurgence through a close and unprecedented examination of dissident writings of diverse ethnic groups in the former Soviet Union, thereby bridging macro-theory with micro-politics. Dissident ethnic networks were a crucial independent institution in the Soviet Union, and a basis of civil society. Voicing the discontent and resentment of the periphery at the policies of the centre or metropole, the dissident writings, known as samizdat highlighted anger at deprivations imposed in the political, cultural, social and economic spheres. Ethnic dissident writings drew on values both internal to the Soviet system and international as sources of legitimation; they met a divided reaction among Russians, with some privileging the unity of the Soviet Union and others sympathetic to the rhetoric of national rights. This focus on national, rather than individual, rights helps explain developments since the fall of the Soviet Union, including the prevalence of authoritarian governments in newly independent states of the former Soviet Union.

After the USSR

After the USSR
Author: Anatoly Michailovich Khazanov
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Total Pages: 340
Release: 1995
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780299148942

Khazanov's astute assessments of ethnic and political strife in Russia, in Chechnia, in Central Asia, in Kazakhstan, among the Meskhetian Turks, and among the Yakut of Eastern Siberia illuminate the interconnections between nationalism, ethnic relations, social structures, and political process in the waning days of the USSR and in the new independent states. Exploring the Soviet nationality policy and its failure to satisfy national aspirations, Khazanov demonstrates the fatal flaws of totalitarian rule and the impossibility of reforming it. Khazanov cautions that the liberal democratic direction of current transformations in the former Soviet Union should not be taken for granted. For most of the independent states, he points out, departing from totalitarianism requires creation of a civil society for the first time in their history. The state's partial retreat from the public sphere leaves a dangerous institutional vacuum, in which nationalism is emerging as the dominant ideology. He warns that this new, post-totalitarian society is still a far cry from a genuine liberal democracy and, despite its inherent instability, may turn out to be a long-lasting phenomenon.