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Breaking the Ties That Bound: The Politics of Marital Strife in Late Imperial Russia
Contributor(s): Engel, Barbara Alpern (Author)
ISBN: 0801479096     ISBN-13: 9780801479090
Publisher: Cornell University Press
OUR PRICE:   $26.96  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 2013
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Sociology - Marriage & Family
- History | Russia & The Former Soviet Union
- History | Social History
Dewey: 306.890
LCCN: 2010032432
Physical Information: 0.8" H x 5.7" W x 8.9" (0.90 lbs) 296 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Russia
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
- Chronological Period - 1851-1899
- Topical - Family
- Topical - Divorce
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Russia's Great Reforms of 1861 were sweeping social and legal changes that aimed to modernize the country. In the following decades, rapid industrialization and urbanization profoundly transformed Russia's social, economic, and cultural landscape. Barbara Alpern Engel explores the personal, cultural, and political consequences of these dramatic changes, focusing on their impact on intimate life and expectations and the resulting challenges to the traditional, patriarchal family order, the cornerstone of Russia's authoritarian political and religious regime. The widely perceived marriage crisis had far-reaching legal, institutional, and political ramifications. In Breaking the Ties That Bound, Engel draws on exceptionally rich archival documentation--in particular, on petitions for marital separation and the materials generated by the ensuing investigations--to explore changing notions of marital relations, domesticity, childrearing, and intimate life among ordinary men and women in imperial Russia.

Engel illustrates with unparalleled vividness the human consequences of the marriage crisis. Her research reveals in myriad ways that the new and more individualistic values of the capitalist marketplace and commercial culture challenged traditional definitions of gender roles and encouraged the self-creation of new social identities. Engel captures the intimate experiences of women and men of the lower and middling classes in their own words, documenting instances not only of physical, mental, and emotional abuse but also of resistance and independence. These changes challenged Russia's rigid political order, forcing a range of state agents, up to and including those who spoke directly in the name of the tsar, to rethink traditional understandings of gender norms and family law. This remarkable social history is thus also a contribution to our understanding of the deepening political crisis of autocracy.


Contributor Bio(s): Engel, Barbara Alpern: - Barbara Alpern Engel is Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She is the author of Women in Russia: 1700-2000, Between the Fields and the City: Women, Work, and Family in Russia, 1861-1914, and Mothers and Daughters: Women of the Intelligentsia in Nineteenth-Century Russia and coeditor of A Revolution of Their Own: Russian Women Remember Their Lives in the Twentieth Century, Russia's Women: Accommodation, Resistance, Transformation, and Five Sisters: Women Against the Tsar.