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Feminism in Russia

In Russia, feminism originated in the 18th century, influenced by the Age of Enlightenment in Western Europe and mostly confined to the aristocracy. Throughout the 19th century, the idea of feminism remained closely tied to revolutionary politics and to social reform. In the 20th century Russian feminists, inspired by socialist doctrine, shifted their focus from philanthropic works to labor organizing among peasants and factory workers. After the February Revolution of 1917, feminist lobbying gained suffrage,[1] alongside general equality for women in society. Through this period, the concern with feminism varied depending on demographics and economic status.[2]

"Kitchen and fashion – that's NOT freedom": Feminist graffiti in St. Petersburg, 2006

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, feminist circles arose among the intelligentsia, although the term continues to carry negative connotations among contemporary Russians. In the 21st century, some Russian feminists, such as the punk-rock band Pussy Riot, have again aligned themselves with anti-government movements, as in the 2012 demonstrations against Russian president Vladimir Putin, which led to a lawyer representing the Russian Orthodox Church calling feminism a "mortal sin".[3]

Origins edit

18th century edit

Russian feminism originated in the 18th century, influenced by the Western European Enlightenment and the prominent role of women as a symbol for democracy and freedom in the French Revolution.[4] Notable Russian intellectual figures of the following, 19th century, such as Alexander Pushkin and Alexander Herzen wrote positively about the increased power and independence of women in their society and supported the growing concern for gender equality.[5]

 
Portrait of Princess Natalia Sheremeteva, first female Russian autobiographer and one of the Decembrist women

In aristocratic Russian society, the greater freedoms allowed to women led to the rise of the powerful, socially-connected woman, including such iconic figures as Catherine the Great, Maria Naryshkina, and Countess Maria Razumovskaya. Women also began to compete with men in the literary sphere, with Russian women authors, poets, and memoirists increasing in popularity.[4]

19th century edit

The loosening of restrictions on women's education and personal freedom that were enacted by Peter the Great in the 18th century created a new class of educated women, such as Princess Natalia Sheremeteva, whose 1767 Notes was the first autobiography by a woman in Russia.[6] In the 19th century, Sheremeteva was one of the "Decembrist women," the female relatives of the Decembrists. The male Decembrists were a group of aristocratic revolutionaries who in 1825 were convicted of plotting to overthrow Emperor Nicholas I, and many of whom were sentenced to serve in labor camps in Siberia. Though the wives, sisters, and mothers of the Decembrist men shared the same liberal democratic political views as their male relatives, they were not charged with treason because they were women; however, 11 of them, including Sheremeteva and Princess Mariya Volkonskaya, still chose to accompany their husbands, brothers, and sons to the labor camps. Though they were portrayed as heroes in popular culture, the Decembrist women insisted that they were simply doing their duty to their family. While in Siberia, some of them cared not only for their own relatives, but also for the other prisoners. They also set up important institutions like libraries and clinics, as well as arranging lectures and concerts.[7]

 
Anna Filosofova, co-founder of the Russian Women's Mutual Philanthropic Society

In the historical writing of the time, the humble devotion of the Decembrist women was contrasted with the intrigues and hedonism of female aristocrats of the 18th century, like Catherine the Great, whose excesses were seen as the danger of too-sudden liberation for women.[8] Although they did not explicitly espouse a feminist agenda, the Decembrist women were used as an example by later generations of Russian feminists, whose concern for gender equality was also tied to revolutionary political agendas.[9]

Efforts of the "triumvirate" edit

In the late 19th century, other aristocratic women began to turn away from refined society life and focused on feminist reform. Among them was Anna Pavlovna Filosofova, a woman from an aristocratic Moscow family married to a high-ranking bureaucrat, who devoted her energy to various societies and projects to benefit the poor and underprivileged in Russian society, including women. Together with Maria Trubnikova, Nadezhda Stasova and Evgenia Konradi, she lobbied the Emperor to create and fund higher education courses for women. She was also a founding member of the Russian Women's Mutual Philanthropic Society and responsible for helping to organize the All-Women's Congress of 1908.[10] Stasova, Trubnikova, and Anna Filosofova became close friends and allies, and were referred to by their contemporaries as the "triumvirate".[11][12][13] The three spent much of their lives working to advance the cause of women, leading the first organized feminist movement in the Russian Empire.[14][12]

The triumvirate, alongside a number of others, founded the Society for Cheap Lodgings and Other Benefits for the Citizens of St. Petersburg in 1859.[14][15] The group had two factions, the "German party" and the "Russian party", which differed on their preferred approach.[13] The "Germans" favored a then-traditional method of philanthropy that involved close supervision of the poor. The "Russians" focused on self-help and direct aid, attempting to avoid patronization and maintain the privacy of those aided.[15][13] In early 1861, the organization split in two, with the Stasova-Trubnikova-Filosofova triumvirate leading the "Russians".[15][13] The reduced group's charter was approved in February 1861.[15][13] The organization provided housing and work as seamstresses to its female clients (primarily widows and wives whose husbands had abandoned them).[13] It included a day care and a communal kitchen.[13]

Push for higher education edit

The triumvirate also began pushing, in 1867, for Russian universities to create courses for women.[14] Demonstrating "considerable skill in rallying popular support", according to the historian Christine Johanson, the women wrote a carefully-worded petition to Tsar Alexander II.[16] They gathered over 400 signatures among middle and upper-class women.[16] However, there was widespread opposition to the education of women, including by the relevant minister, Dmitry Tolstoy.[11][16] Tolstoy argued that women would abandon education after being married, and dismissed the signatories by stating that they were "sheep" merely following the latest fashion.[16] He rejected the petition in late 1868, but allowed mixed-gender public lectures which women could attend, under pressure from the Tsar (then Alexander II).[11][16] However, these were rapidly taken up, overwhelmingly by women.[16]

The triumvirate also appealed to war minister Dmitry Milyutin, who agreed to host the courses after being persuaded by his wife, daughter, and Filosofova. Tolstoy countered by allowing the lectures at his own apartments, where he could monitor them.[16] The political movement in favor of women's education continued to grow, and by October 1869, the Russian government permitted a limited set of courses for women on advanced subjects (including "chemistry, history, anatomy, zoology, and Russian literature").[11][14][16] Stasova organized these and recruited the professors to teach them; the courses began in January 1870. Attended by over 200 women, they became known as the Vladimirskii courses, after their host beginning in 1872, the Vladimir college.[11] The Vladimirskii courses were shut down in 1875.[11]

After further activism from the triumvirate, the Bestuzhev Courses began in 1878; they were a "permanent educational institution for women."[11] The radicalism of some of the students led to criticism, and the courses were shut down in 1886.[11][14][16] By 1889, Stasova persuaded the Tsar (then Alexander III) to permit the courses to reopen. However, as part of Konstantin Pobedonostsev's efforts to bring educational institutions under government control, Stasova was forced to step down as director, officially accused of "inefficiency and muddleheadedness."[11][14] She and her colleagues were replaced by "more compliant" government bureaucrats.[11]

Literature edit

At the end of the century, some of the most widely read Russian literary figures focused on feminist motifs in their works. In his later years, Leo Tolstoy argued against the traditional institution of marriage, comparing it to forced prostitution and slavery, a theme that he also touched on in his novel Anna Karenina.[17] In his plays and short stories, Anton Chekhov portrayed a variety of working female protagonists, from actresses to governesses, who sacrificed social esteem and affluence for the sake of financial and personal independence; in spite of this sacrifice, these women are among the few Chekhovian characters who are truly satisfied with their lives.[18] In his influential 1863 novel What is to be Done?, the writer Nikolai Chernyshevski embodied the new feminist ideas in the novel's heroine, Vera Pavlovna, who dreams of a future utopian society with perfect equality among the sexes.[5]

The Revolution and Soviet era edit

Pre-Revolution edit

At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the focus of Russian feminism shifted from the aristocracy to the peasants and working class. Imbued with socialist ideology, young women began to organize all-women unions among female factory workers, who tended to be ignored or marginalized by male socialists.[19]

Between 1907 and 1917, the League for Women's Equal Rights was the most important feminist organization in Russia. Like the Russian Women's Mutual Philanthropic Society, it was focused on education and social welfare, but it also pushed for equal rights for women, including suffrage, equal inheritance, and an end to passport restrictions. The 1917 Revolution, catalyzed in part by women workers' demonstrations, generated a surge of membership in the organization. In the same year, because of the society's continued lobbying, Russia became the first major world power to grant women the right to vote.[20]

 
Stamp depicting the iconic Soviet statue that symbolized union of a male worker and a kolkhoz woman, which represented the ideal of equality under Communism.

Feminism in Soviet society edit

Vladimir Lenin, who led the Bolsheviks to power in the October Revolution, recognized the importance of women's equality in the Soviet Union (USSR) they established. "To effect [woman's] emancipation and make her the equal of man," he wrote in 1919, two years after the Revolution, following the Marxist theories that underlaid Soviet communism, "it is necessary to be socialized and for women to participate in common productive labor. Then woman will be the equal of man."[21]

In practice, Russian women saw massive gains in their rights under Socialism. Women's suffrage was granted. Abortion was legalized in 1920, making the Soviet Union the first country to do so; however, it was banned again between 1936 and 1955. In 1922, marital rape was made illegal in the Soviet Union.[22] Generous maternity leave was legally required, and a national network of child-care centers was established. The country's first constitution recognized the equal rights of women.[23]

Though the prevailing Soviet ideology stressed total gender equality, and many Soviet women held jobs and advanced degrees, they did not participate in core political roles and institutions.[24][25] Above the middle levels, political and economic leaders were overwhelmingly male[citation needed]. While propaganda claimed, accurately, that more women sat in the Supreme Soviet than in most democratic countries' legislative bodies combined, only two women, Yekaterina Furtseva and (in its last year of existence) Galina Semyonova, were ever members of the party's Politburo, arguably the most important component of country's government.

By the 1970s, while women's liberation was a mainstream term in American public discourse, no comparable movement existed in the Soviet Union, despite gender-based income inequality and a rate of additional work in the household greater than that experienced by American women.[26][27][28] There were also double standards in social norms and expectations. "A man can fool around with other women, drink, even be lackadaisical toward his job, and this is generally forgiven," wrote Hedrick Smith, former Russian correspondent for The New York Times, but "if a woman does the same things, she is criticized for taking a light-hearted approach toward her marriage and her work."[29] In an open letter to the country's leadership shortly before he was expelled from it in 1974, the dissident writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn talked about an alleged heavy burden placed on women to do the menial work in Soviet society: "How can one fail to feel shame and compassion at the sight of our women carrying heavy barrows of stones for paving the street?"[23]

Smith wrote that many women he talked to complained that their emancipation had in fact been exploitation, since economic circumstances effectively compelled them to work while they retained their domestic responsibilities at home, and they were often tired; and that in contrast to Western women, Soviet women regularly saw their idea of liberation as working less and having more opportunity to stay at home.[30][unreliable source?] He recounted a popular joke:

Under capitalism, women are not liberated because they have no opportunity to work. They have to stay at home, go shopping, do the cooking, keep house and take care of the children. But under socialism, women are liberated. They have the opportunity to work all day and then go home, go shopping, do the cooking, keep house and take care of the children.[31]

In addition, as Soviet feminist, Ekaterina Alexandrova wrote in her article "Why Soviet Women Want to Get Married."

...Soviet women work at the most varied jobs, and many of them are well educated, have a profession, and are financially independent of men. And yet, in this very society among these very women, a patriarchal social order and its psychology thrive.[32]

Sexist attitudes still prevailed across Soviet society.[33] Men in the leadership often did not take women or their ideas seriously, and excluded them from many discussions. Domestic violence and sexual harassment continued to exist, although to a much lesser extent than in the West.[failed verification][citation needed] Yet, sociological studies at the time found that Soviet women tended not to see their inequality as a problem.[34][2]

Glasnost and post-Soviet Russia edit

In the mid-1980s Mikhail Gorbachev instituted glasnost, allowing greater freedom of speech and organization than ever before in the USSR. This openness generated a burst in women’s political action, academic research, and artistic and business ventures.[35] Additionally, women were aware that the new government would offer little assistance with their economic and social struggles. Citizens of the Soviet Union could file complaints and receive redress through the Communist Party, but the post-Soviet government had not developed systems of state recourse.[36] Women began to form their own networks of resource sharing and emotional support, which sometimes developed into grassroots organizations.

During glasnost and after the fall of the Soviet Union, feminist circles began to emerge among intelligentsia women in major cultural centers like Moscow and St. Petersburg.[37] In the 1990s, Russian women were hesitant to use the term "feminist" to describe themselves, because they believed it to have negative connotations throughout Russian history, and especially after the Revolution, when it was equated with the "proletariat" woman who only cares for her career, not her family.[38] Russian women’s activism in the 1990s was not explicitly feminist; women attempted to improve their financial and social conditions through any practical means. From this struggle emerged female communities which empowered many women to assert themselves in their pursuit of work, equitable treatment and political voice.

Political and economic transformation in post-Soviet Russia caused deep economic decline in the 1990s and particular financial struggles for women. Although many held jobs, women were also expected to be homemakers. Soviet working women often received extensive employment benefits, such as long child-care leaves, which pushed women into the role of housewife. In the 1990s domestic work grew increasingly demanding as acquiring goods became more time-consuming in the restructured economy. Women’s benefits also made them less attractive employees, and during privatization many companies fired women. While 90% of women were in the labor market in the 1980s, by 1991 women made up 70–80% of unemployed Russians. Those jobs available to women in the 1990s were often in low-wage sectors, and many job descriptions specified that only young, attractive women need apply. Employed women often received significantly less pay than men doing the same work.[39]

21st century edit

 
Members of Pussy Riot, a feminist Russian punk rock band

In 2003, 43 percent of local administrators in St. Petersburg were women.[40]

In 2012, the feminist punk rock band Pussy Riot performed publicity stunts to show their opposition to Vladimir Putin, and have faced criticism from the Russian Orthodox Church and the Putin administration.[41][42] Three members of the group were arrested in March 2012 after performing a "punk-prayer" against Putin in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow. During their trial for hooliganism, they talked about being feminists and stated that this was not incompatible with Russian Orthodoxy. However, Larisa Pavlova, the lawyer representing the Church, insisted this view "does not correspond with reality" and called feminism a "mortal sin."[43]

In 2022, Feminist Anti-War Resistance launched itself with a manifesto opposing the Russian invasion of Ukraine,[44] and organizing a symbolic laying of flowers at Soviet war memorials on International Women's Day.[45][46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ruthchild 2010, pp. XVIII.
  2. ^ a b Carnaghan & Bahry 1990, pp. 390–391.
  3. ^ The New York Times & 8 August 2012.
  4. ^ a b Saurer, Lanzinger & Frysak 2006, p. 365.
  5. ^ a b Posadskaya 1994, pp. 154–156.
  6. ^ Vowles 1999, pp. 14–15.
  7. ^ Pushkareva & Levin 1997, pp. 201–203.
  8. ^ Vowles 1999, p. 15.
  9. ^ Bisha 2002, pp. 300–301.
  10. ^ Noonan & Nechemias 2001, pp. 22–23.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Muravyeva, Marianna (2006). de Haan, Francisca; Daskalova, Krassimira; Loutfi, Anna (eds.). A Biographical Dictionary of Women's Movements and Feminisms: Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries. Central European University Press. pp. 125, 526–9. ISBN 978-615-5053-72-6.
  12. ^ a b Ruthchild 2010, pp. 11–25.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Engel, Barbara Alpern (2000). "Searching for a Politics of Personal Life". Mothers and Daughters: Women of the Intelligentsia in Nineteenth-Century Russia. Studies in Russian Literature and Theory. Evanston, Ill: Northwestern University Press. pp. 49–61. ISBN 978-0-8101-1740-2.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Rappaport, Helen (2001). Encyclopedia of Women Social Reformers. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 671–2. ISBN 978-1-57607-101-4.
  15. ^ a b c d Ruthchild, Rochelle G. (2009). "Reframing Public and Private Space in Mid-Nineteenth Century Russia: The Triumvirate of Anna Filosofova, Nadezhda Stasova, and Mariia Trubnikova". In Worobec, Christine D. (ed.). The Human Tradition in Imperial Russia. The Human Tradition Around the World. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-3737-8.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i Johanson, Christine (1987). "Chapter II: The Politics of Minimal Concessions - Women's Courses in Moscow and St. Petersburg". Women's Struggle for Higher Education in Russia: 1855–1900. Kingston, Canada: McGill University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-0565-0.
  17. ^ Mandelker 1993, p. 6.
  18. ^ Gottlieb 2000, p. 218.
  19. ^ Glickman 1984, p. 243.
  20. ^ Noonan & Nechemias 2001, pp. 38–40.
  21. ^ Smith 1977, p. 166.
  22. ^ The first criminal law code in Soviet Russia differed from Tsarist law on rape: "although the Tsarist law explicitly excluded marital rape, the Soviet law code of 1922 did not." Rule, Wilma (1996). Russian women in politics and society. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-313-29363-4. Marital rape was explicitly included in the 1960 code.
  23. ^ a b Smith 1977, p. 169.
  24. ^ Chapman 1993, p. 5.
  25. ^ Lapidus, Gail Warshofsky (1978). Women in Soviet Society: Equality, Development, and Social Change. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520321809.
  26. ^ Ofer & Vinokur 1992, pp. 20–21.
  27. ^ Engel 1992, pp. 319–320.
  28. ^ Buckley, Mary (1981). "Women in the Soviet Union". Feminist Review. 8 (8). SAGE Publications: 79–106. doi:10.2307/1394929. JSTOR 1394929.
  29. ^ Atkinson, Dallin & Lapidus 1977, p. 395.
  30. ^ Smith 1977, p. 182.
  31. ^ Smith 1991, p. 183.
  32. ^ Mamonova, Tatyana, ed. (1984). Women and Russia: feminist writings from the Soviet Union. Boston: Beacon Press. pp. 32–33. ISBN 0807067083.
  33. ^ Carnaghan & Bahry 1990, pp. 381–383.
  34. ^ Atkinson, Dallin & Lapidus 1977, p. 366.
  35. ^ Racioppi & O’Sullivan 1997, p. 3.
  36. ^ Kay, Rebecca (2000). Russian Women and Their Organizations: Gender, Discrimination and Grassroots Women's Organizations, 1991–96. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 123.
  37. ^ Noonan & Nechemias 2001, p. 251.
  38. ^ Salmenniemi 2008, pp. 112–113.
  39. ^ Racioppi & O’Sullivan 1997, pp. 47–50.
  40. ^ The New York Times & 9 March 2003.
  41. ^ The Guardian & 2 February 2012.
  42. ^ Forbes & 14 June 2012.
  43. ^ The Guardian & 7 August 2012.
  44. ^ Feminist Anti-War Resistance (27 February 2022). "Russia's Feminists Are in the Streets Protesting Putin's War". Jacobin. Translated by Kalk, Anastasia; Surman, Jan. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  45. ^ Naylor, Aliide (10 March 2022). "Amidst a Crackdown, Russia's Anti-War Artists and Activists Try To Reclaim the Streets". ArtReview. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  46. ^ "Russian Feminists Stage Anti-War Protests in 100 Cities". The Moscow Times. 9 March 2022. Retrieved 9 March 2022.

Bibliography edit

feminism, russia, russia, feminism, originated, 18th, century, influenced, enlightenment, western, europe, mostly, confined, aristocracy, throughout, 19th, century, idea, feminism, remained, closely, tied, revolutionary, politics, social, reform, 20th, century. In Russia feminism originated in the 18th century influenced by the Age of Enlightenment in Western Europe and mostly confined to the aristocracy Throughout the 19th century the idea of feminism remained closely tied to revolutionary politics and to social reform In the 20th century Russian feminists inspired by socialist doctrine shifted their focus from philanthropic works to labor organizing among peasants and factory workers After the February Revolution of 1917 feminist lobbying gained suffrage 1 alongside general equality for women in society Through this period the concern with feminism varied depending on demographics and economic status 2 Kitchen and fashion that s NOT freedom Feminist graffiti in St Petersburg 2006After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 feminist circles arose among the intelligentsia although the term continues to carry negative connotations among contemporary Russians In the 21st century some Russian feminists such as the punk rock band Pussy Riot have again aligned themselves with anti government movements as in the 2012 demonstrations against Russian president Vladimir Putin which led to a lawyer representing the Russian Orthodox Church calling feminism a mortal sin 3 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 18th century 1 2 19th century 1 2 1 Efforts of the triumvirate 1 2 2 Push for higher education 1 2 3 Literature 2 The Revolution and Soviet era 2 1 Pre Revolution 2 2 Feminism in Soviet society 3 Glasnost and post Soviet Russia 4 21st century 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyOrigins edit18th century edit Russian feminism originated in the 18th century influenced by the Western European Enlightenment and the prominent role of women as a symbol for democracy and freedom in the French Revolution 4 Notable Russian intellectual figures of the following 19th century such as Alexander Pushkin and Alexander Herzen wrote positively about the increased power and independence of women in their society and supported the growing concern for gender equality 5 nbsp Portrait of Princess Natalia Sheremeteva first female Russian autobiographer and one of the Decembrist womenIn aristocratic Russian society the greater freedoms allowed to women led to the rise of the powerful socially connected woman including such iconic figures as Catherine the Great Maria Naryshkina and Countess Maria Razumovskaya Women also began to compete with men in the literary sphere with Russian women authors poets and memoirists increasing in popularity 4 19th century edit The loosening of restrictions on women s education and personal freedom that were enacted by Peter the Great in the 18th century created a new class of educated women such as Princess Natalia Sheremeteva whose 1767 Notes was the first autobiography by a woman in Russia 6 In the 19th century Sheremeteva was one of the Decembrist women the female relatives of the Decembrists The male Decembrists were a group of aristocratic revolutionaries who in 1825 were convicted of plotting to overthrow Emperor Nicholas I and many of whom were sentenced to serve in labor camps in Siberia Though the wives sisters and mothers of the Decembrist men shared the same liberal democratic political views as their male relatives they were not charged with treason because they were women however 11 of them including Sheremeteva and Princess Mariya Volkonskaya still chose to accompany their husbands brothers and sons to the labor camps Though they were portrayed as heroes in popular culture the Decembrist women insisted that they were simply doing their duty to their family While in Siberia some of them cared not only for their own relatives but also for the other prisoners They also set up important institutions like libraries and clinics as well as arranging lectures and concerts 7 nbsp Anna Filosofova co founder of the Russian Women s Mutual Philanthropic SocietyIn the historical writing of the time the humble devotion of the Decembrist women was contrasted with the intrigues and hedonism of female aristocrats of the 18th century like Catherine the Great whose excesses were seen as the danger of too sudden liberation for women 8 Although they did not explicitly espouse a feminist agenda the Decembrist women were used as an example by later generations of Russian feminists whose concern for gender equality was also tied to revolutionary political agendas 9 Efforts of the triumvirate edit In the late 19th century other aristocratic women began to turn away from refined society life and focused on feminist reform Among them was Anna Pavlovna Filosofova a woman from an aristocratic Moscow family married to a high ranking bureaucrat who devoted her energy to various societies and projects to benefit the poor and underprivileged in Russian society including women Together with Maria Trubnikova Nadezhda Stasova and Evgenia Konradi she lobbied the Emperor to create and fund higher education courses for women She was also a founding member of the Russian Women s Mutual Philanthropic Society and responsible for helping to organize the All Women s Congress of 1908 10 Stasova Trubnikova and Anna Filosofova became close friends and allies and were referred to by their contemporaries as the triumvirate 11 12 13 The three spent much of their lives working to advance the cause of women leading the first organized feminist movement in the Russian Empire 14 12 The triumvirate alongside a number of others founded the Society for Cheap Lodgings and Other Benefits for the Citizens of St Petersburg in 1859 14 15 The group had two factions the German party and the Russian party which differed on their preferred approach 13 The Germans favored a then traditional method of philanthropy that involved close supervision of the poor The Russians focused on self help and direct aid attempting to avoid patronization and maintain the privacy of those aided 15 13 In early 1861 the organization split in two with the Stasova Trubnikova Filosofova triumvirate leading the Russians 15 13 The reduced group s charter was approved in February 1861 15 13 The organization provided housing and work as seamstresses to its female clients primarily widows and wives whose husbands had abandoned them 13 It included a day care and a communal kitchen 13 Push for higher education edit The triumvirate also began pushing in 1867 for Russian universities to create courses for women 14 Demonstrating considerable skill in rallying popular support according to the historian Christine Johanson the women wrote a carefully worded petition to Tsar Alexander II 16 They gathered over 400 signatures among middle and upper class women 16 However there was widespread opposition to the education of women including by the relevant minister Dmitry Tolstoy 11 16 Tolstoy argued that women would abandon education after being married and dismissed the signatories by stating that they were sheep merely following the latest fashion 16 He rejected the petition in late 1868 but allowed mixed gender public lectures which women could attend under pressure from the Tsar then Alexander II 11 16 However these were rapidly taken up overwhelmingly by women 16 The triumvirate also appealed to war minister Dmitry Milyutin who agreed to host the courses after being persuaded by his wife daughter and Filosofova Tolstoy countered by allowing the lectures at his own apartments where he could monitor them 16 The political movement in favor of women s education continued to grow and by October 1869 the Russian government permitted a limited set of courses for women on advanced subjects including chemistry history anatomy zoology and Russian literature 11 14 16 Stasova organized these and recruited the professors to teach them the courses began in January 1870 Attended by over 200 women they became known as the Vladimirskii courses after their host beginning in 1872 the Vladimir college 11 The Vladimirskii courses were shut down in 1875 11 After further activism from the triumvirate the Bestuzhev Courses began in 1878 they were a permanent educational institution for women 11 The radicalism of some of the students led to criticism and the courses were shut down in 1886 11 14 16 By 1889 Stasova persuaded the Tsar then Alexander III to permit the courses to reopen However as part of Konstantin Pobedonostsev s efforts to bring educational institutions under government control Stasova was forced to step down as director officially accused of inefficiency and muddleheadedness 11 14 She and her colleagues were replaced by more compliant government bureaucrats 11 Literature edit At the end of the century some of the most widely read Russian literary figures focused on feminist motifs in their works In his later years Leo Tolstoy argued against the traditional institution of marriage comparing it to forced prostitution and slavery a theme that he also touched on in his novel Anna Karenina 17 In his plays and short stories Anton Chekhov portrayed a variety of working female protagonists from actresses to governesses who sacrificed social esteem and affluence for the sake of financial and personal independence in spite of this sacrifice these women are among the few Chekhovian characters who are truly satisfied with their lives 18 In his influential 1863 novel What is to be Done the writer Nikolai Chernyshevski embodied the new feminist ideas in the novel s heroine Vera Pavlovna who dreams of a future utopian society with perfect equality among the sexes 5 The Revolution and Soviet era editPre Revolution edit At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century the focus of Russian feminism shifted from the aristocracy to the peasants and working class Imbued with socialist ideology young women began to organize all women unions among female factory workers who tended to be ignored or marginalized by male socialists 19 Between 1907 and 1917 the League for Women s Equal Rights was the most important feminist organization in Russia Like the Russian Women s Mutual Philanthropic Society it was focused on education and social welfare but it also pushed for equal rights for women including suffrage equal inheritance and an end to passport restrictions The 1917 Revolution catalyzed in part by women workers demonstrations generated a surge of membership in the organization In the same year because of the society s continued lobbying Russia became the first major world power to grant women the right to vote 20 nbsp Stamp depicting the iconic Soviet statue that symbolized union of a male worker and a kolkhoz woman which represented the ideal of equality under Communism Feminism in Soviet society edit Vladimir Lenin who led the Bolsheviks to power in the October Revolution recognized the importance of women s equality in the Soviet Union USSR they established To effect woman s emancipation and make her the equal of man he wrote in 1919 two years after the Revolution following the Marxist theories that underlaid Soviet communism it is necessary to be socialized and for women to participate in common productive labor Then woman will be the equal of man 21 In practice Russian women saw massive gains in their rights under Socialism Women s suffrage was granted Abortion was legalized in 1920 making the Soviet Union the first country to do so however it was banned again between 1936 and 1955 In 1922 marital rape was made illegal in the Soviet Union 22 Generous maternity leave was legally required and a national network of child care centers was established The country s first constitution recognized the equal rights of women 23 Though the prevailing Soviet ideology stressed total gender equality and many Soviet women held jobs and advanced degrees they did not participate in core political roles and institutions 24 25 Above the middle levels political and economic leaders were overwhelmingly male citation needed While propaganda claimed accurately that more women sat in the Supreme Soviet than in most democratic countries legislative bodies combined only two women Yekaterina Furtseva and in its last year of existence Galina Semyonova were ever members of the party s Politburo arguably the most important component of country s government By the 1970s while women s liberation was a mainstream term in American public discourse no comparable movement existed in the Soviet Union despite gender based income inequality and a rate of additional work in the household greater than that experienced by American women 26 27 28 There were also double standards in social norms and expectations A man can fool around with other women drink even be lackadaisical toward his job and this is generally forgiven wrote Hedrick Smith former Russian correspondent for The New York Times but if a woman does the same things she is criticized for taking a light hearted approach toward her marriage and her work 29 In an open letter to the country s leadership shortly before he was expelled from it in 1974 the dissident writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn talked about an alleged heavy burden placed on women to do the menial work in Soviet society How can one fail to feel shame and compassion at the sight of our women carrying heavy barrows of stones for paving the street 23 Smith wrote that many women he talked to complained that their emancipation had in fact been exploitation since economic circumstances effectively compelled them to work while they retained their domestic responsibilities at home and they were often tired and that in contrast to Western women Soviet women regularly saw their idea of liberation as working less and having more opportunity to stay at home 30 unreliable source He recounted a popular joke Under capitalism women are not liberated because they have no opportunity to work They have to stay at home go shopping do the cooking keep house and take care of the children But under socialism women are liberated They have the opportunity to work all day and then go home go shopping do the cooking keep house and take care of the children 31 In addition as Soviet feminist Ekaterina Alexandrova wrote in her article Why Soviet Women Want to Get Married Soviet women work at the most varied jobs and many of them are well educated have a profession and are financially independent of men And yet in this very society among these very women a patriarchal social order and its psychology thrive 32 Sexist attitudes still prevailed across Soviet society 33 Men in the leadership often did not take women or their ideas seriously and excluded them from many discussions Domestic violence and sexual harassment continued to exist although to a much lesser extent than in the West failed verification citation needed Yet sociological studies at the time found that Soviet women tended not to see their inequality as a problem 34 2 Glasnost and post Soviet Russia editIn the mid 1980s Mikhail Gorbachev instituted glasnost allowing greater freedom of speech and organization than ever before in the USSR This openness generated a burst in women s political action academic research and artistic and business ventures 35 Additionally women were aware that the new government would offer little assistance with their economic and social struggles Citizens of the Soviet Union could file complaints and receive redress through the Communist Party but the post Soviet government had not developed systems of state recourse 36 Women began to form their own networks of resource sharing and emotional support which sometimes developed into grassroots organizations During glasnost and after the fall of the Soviet Union feminist circles began to emerge among intelligentsia women in major cultural centers like Moscow and St Petersburg 37 In the 1990s Russian women were hesitant to use the term feminist to describe themselves because they believed it to have negative connotations throughout Russian history and especially after the Revolution when it was equated with the proletariat woman who only cares for her career not her family 38 Russian women s activism in the 1990s was not explicitly feminist women attempted to improve their financial and social conditions through any practical means From this struggle emerged female communities which empowered many women to assert themselves in their pursuit of work equitable treatment and political voice Political and economic transformation in post Soviet Russia caused deep economic decline in the 1990s and particular financial struggles for women Although many held jobs women were also expected to be homemakers Soviet working women often received extensive employment benefits such as long child care leaves which pushed women into the role of housewife In the 1990s domestic work grew increasingly demanding as acquiring goods became more time consuming in the restructured economy Women s benefits also made them less attractive employees and during privatization many companies fired women While 90 of women were in the labor market in the 1980s by 1991 women made up 70 80 of unemployed Russians Those jobs available to women in the 1990s were often in low wage sectors and many job descriptions specified that only young attractive women need apply Employed women often received significantly less pay than men doing the same work 39 21st century edit nbsp Members of Pussy Riot a feminist Russian punk rock bandIn 2003 43 percent of local administrators in St Petersburg were women 40 In 2012 the feminist punk rock band Pussy Riot performed publicity stunts to show their opposition to Vladimir Putin and have faced criticism from the Russian Orthodox Church and the Putin administration 41 42 Three members of the group were arrested in March 2012 after performing a punk prayer against Putin in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow During their trial for hooliganism they talked about being feminists and stated that this was not incompatible with Russian Orthodoxy However Larisa Pavlova the lawyer representing the Church insisted this view does not correspond with reality and called feminism a mortal sin 43 In 2022 Feminist Anti War Resistance launched itself with a manifesto opposing the Russian invasion of Ukraine 44 and organizing a symbolic laying of flowers at Soviet war memorials on International Women s Day 45 46 See also editGender roles in post communist Central and Eastern Europe Women in Russia Alexandra Kollontai Russian feminist politician in the Soviet UnionReferences edit Ruthchild 2010 pp XVIII a b Carnaghan amp Bahry 1990 pp 390 391 The New York Times amp 8 August 2012 a b Saurer Lanzinger amp Frysak 2006 p 365 a b Posadskaya 1994 pp 154 156 Vowles 1999 pp 14 15 Pushkareva amp Levin 1997 pp 201 203 Vowles 1999 p 15 Bisha 2002 pp 300 301 Noonan amp Nechemias 2001 pp 22 23 a b c d e f g h i j Muravyeva Marianna 2006 de Haan Francisca Daskalova Krassimira Loutfi Anna eds A Biographical Dictionary of Women s Movements and Feminisms Central Eastern and South Eastern Europe 19th and 20th Centuries Central European University Press pp 125 526 9 ISBN 978 615 5053 72 6 a b Ruthchild 2010 pp 11 25 a b c d e f g Engel Barbara Alpern 2000 Searching for a Politics of Personal Life Mothers and Daughters Women of the Intelligentsia in Nineteenth Century Russia Studies in Russian Literature and Theory Evanston Ill Northwestern University Press pp 49 61 ISBN 978 0 8101 1740 2 a b c d e f Rappaport Helen 2001 Encyclopedia of Women Social Reformers Vol 2 Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO pp 671 2 ISBN 978 1 57607 101 4 a b c d Ruthchild Rochelle G 2009 Reframing Public and Private Space in Mid Nineteenth Century Russia The Triumvirate of Anna Filosofova Nadezhda Stasova and Mariia Trubnikova In Worobec Christine D ed The Human Tradition in Imperial Russia The Human Tradition Around the World Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 3737 8 a b c d e f g h i Johanson Christine 1987 Chapter II The Politics of Minimal Concessions Women s Courses in Moscow and St Petersburg Women s Struggle for Higher Education in Russia 1855 1900 Kingston Canada McGill University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 0565 0 Mandelker 1993 p 6 Gottlieb 2000 p 218 Glickman 1984 p 243 Noonan amp Nechemias 2001 pp 38 40 Smith 1977 p 166 The first criminal law code in Soviet Russia differed from Tsarist law on rape although the Tsarist law explicitly excluded marital rape the Soviet law code of 1922 did not Rule Wilma 1996 Russian women in politics and society Greenwood Publishing Group p 160 ISBN 978 0 313 29363 4 Marital rape was explicitly included in the 1960 code a b Smith 1977 p 169 Chapman 1993 p 5 Lapidus Gail Warshofsky 1978 Women in Soviet Society Equality Development and Social Change Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520321809 Ofer amp Vinokur 1992 pp 20 21 Engel 1992 pp 319 320 Buckley Mary 1981 Women in the Soviet Union Feminist Review 8 8 SAGE Publications 79 106 doi 10 2307 1394929 JSTOR 1394929 Atkinson Dallin amp Lapidus 1977 p 395 Smith 1977 p 182 Smith 1991 p 183 Mamonova Tatyana ed 1984 Women and Russia feminist writings from the Soviet Union Boston Beacon Press pp 32 33 ISBN 0807067083 Carnaghan amp Bahry 1990 pp 381 383 Atkinson Dallin amp Lapidus 1977 p 366 Racioppi amp O Sullivan 1997 p 3 Kay Rebecca 2000 Russian Women and Their Organizations Gender Discrimination and Grassroots Women s Organizations 1991 96 New York Palgrave Macmillan p 123 Noonan amp Nechemias 2001 p 251 Salmenniemi 2008 pp 112 113 Racioppi amp O Sullivan 1997 pp 47 50 The New York Times amp 9 March 2003 The Guardian amp 2 February 2012 Forbes amp 14 June 2012 The Guardian amp 7 August 2012 Feminist Anti War Resistance 27 February 2022 Russia s Feminists Are in the Streets Protesting Putin s War Jacobin Translated by Kalk Anastasia Surman Jan Retrieved 11 March 2022 Naylor Aliide 10 March 2022 Amidst a Crackdown Russia s Anti War Artists and Activists Try To Reclaim the Streets ArtReview Retrieved 11 March 2022 Russian Feminists Stage Anti War Protests in 100 Cities The Moscow Times 9 March 2022 Retrieved 9 March 2022 Bibliography edit Atkinson Dorothy Dallin Alexander Lapidus Gail Warshofsky 1977 Women in Russia Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0910 1 Bisha Robin 2002 Russian Women 1698 1917 Experience and Expression an Anthology of Sources Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34084 9 Carnaghan Ellen Bahry Donna July 1990 Political Attitudes and the Gender Gap in the USSR Comparative Politics 22 4 379 399 doi 10 2307 421970 JSTOR 421970 Chapman Jenny 1993 Politics Feminism and the Reformation of Gender Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 01698 8 Clements Barbara Evans 2012 A History of Women in Russia From Earliest Times to the Present Elder Miriam 2 February 2012 Feminist punk band Pussy Riot take revolt to the Kremlin The Guardian Retrieved 29 June 2012 Elder Miriam 7 August 2012 Pussy Riot trial prosecutors call for three year jail term The Guardian Retrieved 19 August 2012 Engel Barbra Alpern 1992 Engendering Russia s History Women in Post Emancipation Russia and the Soviet Union Slavic Review 51 2 309 322 doi 10 2307 2499534 JSTOR 2499534 S2CID 163916536 Gottlieb Vera 2000 The Cambridge Companion to Chekhov Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58917 8 Glickman Rose L 1 January 1984 Russian Factory Women Workplace and Society 1880 1914 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05736 4 Mandelker Amy 1993 Framing Anna Karenina Tolstoy the Woman Question and the Victorian Novel Ohio State University Press ISBN 978 0 8142 0613 3 Noonan Norma C Nechemias Carol 2001 Encyclopedia of Russian Women s Movements Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30438 5 Ofer Gur Vinokur Aaron 1992 The Soviet Household under the Old Regime Economic Conditions and Behaviour in the 1970 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38398 1 Posadskaya Anastasia 1994 Women in Russia A New Era in Russian Feminism Verso Books ISBN 978 0 86091 657 4 Pushkareva Natalia Lʹvovna Levin Eve 1997 Women in Russian History From the Tenth to the Twentieth Century M E Sharpe ISBN 978 1 56324 798 9 Racioppi Linda O Sullivan Katherine 1997 Women s Activism in Contemporary Russia Philadelphia PA Temple University Press Ruthchild Rochelle Goldberg 11 July 2010 Equality amp Revolution Women s Rights in the Russian Empire 1905 1917 University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 7375 1 Salmenniemi Suvi 14 July 2008 Democratization and Gender in Contemporary Russia Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 44112 4 Saurer Edith Lanzinger Margareth Frysak Elisabeth 2006 Women s Movements Networks and Debates in Post communist Countries in the 19th and 20th Centuries Bohlau Verlag Koln Weimar ISBN 978 3 412 32205 2 Smith Hedrick 1977 The Russians original paperback ed Ballantine ISBN 978 0 345 25521 1 Smith Hedrick 1991 The New Russians Random House ISBN 978 0 679 41294 6 Soldak Katya 14 June 2012 Pussy Riot Putin The Church and Human Rights Forbes Retrieved 16 June 2012 Tavernise Sabrina 9 March 2003 Women Redefine Their Roles in New Russia The New York Times Retrieved 16 June 2012 Herszenhorn David M 8 August 2012 In Russia Madonna Defends a Band s Anti Putin Stunt The New York Times Retrieved 9 August 2012 Vowles Judith 11 March 1999 Russia Through Women s Eyes Autobiographies from Tsarist Russia Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 06754 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feminism in Russia amp oldid 1205193578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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