Women in Soviet Society by Gail Lapidus

Women in Soviet Society by Gail Lapidus

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Women in Soviet Society by Gail Lapidus

Women in Soviet Society: Equality, Development, and Social Change reframes one of the twentieth century's most sweeping social experiments: the promise--and limits--of Soviet sexual equality. Gail Warshofsky Lapidus moves beyond celebratory claims and simple indictments to offer a developmental account of how women's roles were mobilized to serve state-building, industrialization, and political consolidation. Anchored in Tocqueville's politics of equality and engaging Marxist, Leninist, and psychoanalytic debates, Lapidus tracks the tension between revolutionary ideals and institutional realities: the Zhenotdel's early activism; legal engineering around marriage, divorce, and abortion; the Stalinist synthesis that re-centered family authority while accelerating female labor-force participation; and postwar affirmative action, Soviet-style in protection laws, childcare, and education. The result is a nuanced portrait of gains and trade-offs--expanded access to schooling and work coupled with occupational segregation, wage penalties, and the enduring double burden created by underbuilt services and persistent domestic expectations.

Structured with exceptional clarity, the book maps women's changing positions across economy, polity, and family, and then situates Soviet experience in comparative perspective. Chapters examine sectoral employment patterns, vertical stratification, and earnings; women's representation in Soviets, the Party, and the elite; demographic trends in marriage, divorce, fertility; and the policy reassessments that recast women alternately as productive and reproductive resources. Lapidus's core argument--that Leninist development instrumentalized equality while also enabling real social mobility--yields a balanced balance sheet of achievements and dilemmas. Drawing on law, policy, statistics, and contemporary debates, she shows how modernization, ideological imperatives, and cultural continuities co-produced contradictory outcomes. For scholars of gender, Soviet studies, and comparative development, Women in Soviet Society offers a definitive, empirically grounded analysis that restores complexity to a case too often reduced to slogan or cautionary tale.

This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1978.
Andrei Melville is vice-president of the Soviet Peace Committee. Gall W. Lapidus is a professor of political science at the University of California-Berkeley and chair of the Berkeley-Stanford Program in Soviet Studies.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780520039384
ISBN 10 0520039386
Title Women in Soviet Society
Author Gail Lapidus
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher University of California Press
Year published 1978-01-01
Number of pages 391
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.