Knowledge (XXG)

Alexandra Kollontai

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families as legacies of an oppressive, property-rights-based, and individualistic past in which women were simultaneously subjected to both wage labour outside the home and unpaid maternal and domestic labour within it. Kollontai admonished men and women to discard their nostalgia for traditional family life. "The worker-mother must learn not to differentiate between yours and mine; she must remember that there are only our children, the children of Russia's communist workers." Under Communism, both men and women would work for, and be supported by, society, not their families. Similarly, their children would be wards of society, raised in common. However, she also praised parental attachment: "Communist society will take upon itself all the duties involved in the education of the child, but the joys of parenthood will not be taken away from those who are capable of appreciating them."
3082:, recommended the "unrepentant" three be purged from the party. In her defensive speech before the Congress, Kollontai emphasized her loyalty to the party and her devotion to giving the leading role in the party and outside it to the working class, she proclaimed her full observance of the previous year's decree on party unity, and concluded: "If there is no place for this in our party, then exclude me. But even outside the ranks of our party, I will live, work and fight for the Communist party." Eventually, a resolution was passed allowing the three to remain in the party unless they committed further violations of its discipline. 4161:, apart from Stalin and Kollontai, there were 19 full members in the Central Committee at the time of the Bolshevik Revolution: two of them were killed by counter-revolutionaries; five, including Lenin, died for other causes before Stalin's accession to power; the 12 members left fell all victims of Stalinist repression, including Trotsky who was assassinated in Mexico . However, Matvei Muranov too came unharmed through purges, outliving all his former colleagues until 1959: the exact number of those who fell victims of Stalin must thus be calculated as 11. For the list and dates of death of the full members of the 2838: 2733:, she soon abandoned this for other revolutionary projects. Marxism, with its emphasis on the class consciousness of factory workers, the revolutionary seizure of power, and the construction of modern industrial society, attracted Kollontai and many of her peers in Russia's radical intelligentsia. Kollontai's first activities were timid and modest, helping out a few hours a week with her sister Zhenia at a library that supported Sunday classes in basic literacy for urban workers, sneaking a few socialist ideas into the lessons. Through this library Kollontai met 2856:. The couple appeared quite oddly assorted: she was a Menshevik intellectual, of noble origins, thirteen years older than him; he was a self-taught metalworker from provincial Russia and a Bolshevik leading exponent of some prominence. Their romantic relationship came to an end in July 1916, but evolved thereafter into a long-lasting friendship as they wound up sharing many of the same general political views. They were still in contact in the early 1930s when Kollontai lived abroad in a sort of diplomatic exile, and Shliapnikov was going to be executed during 3444:. However, this does not mean that she advocated casual sexual encounters; indeed, she believed that due to the inequality between men and women that persisted under socialism, such encounters would lead to women being exploited, and being left to raise children alone. Instead she believed that true socialism could not be achieved without a radical change in attitudes to sexuality, so that it might be freed from the oppressive norms that she saw as a continuation of bourgeois ideas about property. A common myth describes her as a proponent of the 3006:: it expounded her personal views on the subjects under discussion, was intended to be distributed only to the delegates and has since remained probably her most famous work. "Kollontai's propositions for reform mostly repeated those enumerated by the Workers' Opposition, but she placed a greater emphasis on reducing 'bureaucratisation'," and denouncing petty-bourgeois or non-proletarian influences on Soviet institutions and on the party. Her language "conveyed much harsher criticism of the party and 3496:
all the dangers of this environment. The woman who is wife, mother and worker has to expend every ounce of energy to fulfil these roles. She has to work the same hours as her husband in some factory, printing-house or commercial establishment and then on top of that she has to find the time to attend to her household and look after her children. Capitalism has placed a crushing burden on woman's shoulders: it has made her a wage-worker without having reduced her cares as housekeeper or mother.
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the general interests of women. But once the barrier is down and the bourgeois women have received access to political activity, the recent defenders of the "rights of all women" become enthusiastic defenders of the privileges of their class, content to leave the younger sisters with no rights at all. Thus, when the feminists talk to working women about the need for a common struggle to realise some "general women's" principle, women of the working class are naturally distrustful.
2872:". After leaving Germany, Kollontai traveled to Denmark, only to discover that the Danish social democrats also supported the war. The next place where Kollontai tried to speak and write against the war was Sweden, but the Swedish government imprisoned her for her activities. After her release, Kollontai traveled to Norway, where she at last found a socialist community that was receptive to her ideas. Kollontai stayed primarily in Norway until 1917. She travelled twice to the 3387: 3120:, asking to be sent on a mission abroad. Stalin granted her request and, starting from October 1922, she began to be entrusted with diplomatic appointments abroad and was thus prevented from playing any further political role at home. At first she hoped it was just a passing phase in her life and that she would soon return to her political work in the Zhenotdel, but eventually she had to realize that the diplomatic assignment had become a sort of exile. 2630: 3091: 2938: 3267: 2698: 550: 268: 3742: 2827: 3237:
regime.' Yet, it could also be argued that she had just internalized for good the lesson Trotsky had taught her at the aforementioned 1922 meeting of the Comintern, when he had tamed her last remnants of recalcitrance, forcing her into bowing to party discipline. Kollontai had, as it were, countered in advance, in her 1927 article through which she finally aligned herself, once and for all, with the Stalinists:
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Formerly every girl would learn to knit stockings. Nowa- days, what working woman would think of making her own? In the first place she doesn't have the time. Time is money, and no one wants to waste time in an unproductive and useless manner. Few working women would start to pickle cucumbers or make other preserves when all these things can be bought in the shop. – Alexandra Kollontai (1920),
3728: 4185:'Misha' Kollontai managed to live most of his time in the United States where he worked as an engineer; meanwhile his mother raised her grandson Vladimir Mikhailovich in Sweden (Clements, p. 251). Misha, however, died during the Second World War, probably in Stockholm, where he had sought his mother's nursing because he had fallen ill with heart disease (Clements, pp. 265 e 270). 2654: 479: 2642: 3023:, on the last day the congress passed, among others, two secret resolutions: one, specially aimed at the Workers' Opposition, condemned 'Anarcho-syndicalist deviation' within the party; the other ('On party unity') simply banned all factions. Thus, the Workers' Opposition was forcibly dissolved, and Kollontai was practically sidelined. 6029: 3229:
personal nature that might be regarded as forms of self-celebration. On asking the publisher to make the changes requested, Kollontai apologized with obvious embarrassment, inviting repeatedly to debit her all expenses and writing twice that, under current circumstances, it was not absolutely possible "to do otherwise".
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On the other hand, Kollontai is rather unlikely to have ever been so quiet and safe during the Terror. Jenny Morrison writes that "she lived the last 20 years of her life in constant fear of assassination or imprisonment". Barbara Allen learnt from Kollontai's grandson of a family tradition (based on
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was assassinated two weeks later by less sophisticated means when he changed his ordinary route through the streets, but Mravinskii was arrested when the dynamite tunnel was discovered, charged with misleading the police. Alexandra's mother persuaded her second husband to use his influence to aid her
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Kollontai's views on the role of marriage and the family under Communism were arguably more influential than her advocacy of "free love". Kollontai believed that, like the state, the family unit would wither away once the second stage of communism became a reality. She viewed marriage and traditional
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movement. While proponents of Wages for Housework argue that the domestic labour is productive labour worthy of monetary compensation, Kollontai devalued "women's work", believing it to be an antiquated vestige of the past. Unlike supporters of Wages for Housework who advocated for the integration of
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It is a well-known fact that the Soviet Union has achieved exceptional successes in drawing women into the active construction of the state. This generally accepted truth is not disputed even by our enemies. The Soviet woman is a full and equal citizen of her country. In opening up to women access to
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The followers of the faction among the delegates, however, remained quite few and proved to be declining during the proceedings, when Lenin did not even hesitate to draw snickers from delegates by hinting at the amatory past of the Kollontai-Shliapnikov couple. Although Kollontai and her comrades had
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Class instinct – whatever the feminists say – always shows itself to be more powerful than the noble enthusiasms of "above-class" politics. So long as the bourgeois women and their "younger sisters" are equal in their inequality, the former can, with complete sincerity, make great efforts to defend
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later recounted that, on his departure from Moscow in 1922, Kollontai jokingly warned him not to believe any news of her being arrested for stealing Kremlin silverware, for such news could only mean that she was "not entirely in agreement with about some little problem of agricultural or industrial
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In 1890 or 1891, Alexandra, aged around 19, met her cousin and future husband, Vladimir Ludvigovich Kollontai (9 July 1867 – July/August 1917), an engineering student of modest means enrolled at a military institute. Alexandra's mother objected bitterly to the potential union since the young man was
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melodrama, the first husband of Alexandra Kollontai's mother, an engineer named Mravinskii, was enlisted by the Tsar's secret police in 1881 to help ferret out a plot to kill the Tsar with dynamite placed under the street in a tunnel. Mravinskii helped police agents check for secret tunnels made by
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What kind of "family life" can there be if the wife and mother is out at work for at least eight hours and, counting the travelling, is away from home for ten hours a day? Her home is neglected; the children grow up without any maternal care, spending most of the time out on the streets, exposed to
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All that was formerly produced in the bosom of the family is now being manufactured on a mass scale in workshops and factories. The machine has superseded the wife. What house- keeper would now bother to make candles, spin wool or weave cloth? All these products can be bought in the shop next door.
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The workers' state needs new relations between the sexes, just as the narrow and exclusive affection of the mother for her own children must expand until it extends to all the children of the great, proletarian family, the indissoluble marriage based on the servitude of women is replaced by a free
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You work! You, who can't even make up your own bed to look neat and tidy! You, who never picked up a needle! You, who go marching through the house like a princess and never help the servants with their work! You, who are just like your father, going around dreaming and leaving your books on every
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official responsible was arrested. Kollontai left Moscow for Scandinavia before a new official could be assigned to the case" and it was later closed somehow or other. According to Allen, moreover, neither Kollontai nor Shliapnikov (nor even other major exponents of the Workers' Opposition) would
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than did Shlyapnikov's language" in the official faction platform. Lenin was very upset about Kollontai joining the Workers' Opposition and, when he was given a copy of her pamphlet, he just 'leafed through' it and immediately castigated Kollontai. He stated she had written 'the platform of a new
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Another of Kollontai's half-nephews (the son of her eldest half-sister Adèle and also her own cousin), who was an out-and-out Bolshevik from 1917, committed suicide in 1931. "They overdid vigilance," bitterly wrote Kollontai in her diary, as she prepared, "trembling", to tell her half-sister the
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Kollontai's saw domestic labour as an impediment to her ideal of the "universal family". Rather than viewing the tasks that were traditionally reserved for women as productive labour, Kollontai believed that housework stood in the way of industrialization and modernization and that under a fully
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was contemptuously critical of Kollontai's political attitude, writing that 'In Russia, Kolontay took from the very first an ultra-left stand, not only toward me but toward Lenin as well. She waged many a battle against the "Lenin-Trotsky" regime, only to bow most movingly later on to the Stalin
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After the Eleventh Congress, Kollontai became a political outcast. She was badly shaken by having teetered dangerously close to expulsion, and regarded the idea of being excluded from the 'revolutionary community of the elect' as a dreadful "nightmare". She even speculated she might be arrested.
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peasant who had made a fortune selling wood. Alexandra Alexandrovna Masalina became known as Alexandra Alexandrovna Masalina-Mravinskaya after her marriage to her first husband, Konstantin Iosipovich Mravinsky (originally spelled Mrovinsky) (1829–1921). Her marriage to Mravinsky was an arranged
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publisher Helga Kern, she deemed it necessary to completely revise the first draft of her work she had handed over to the publisher, by deleting practically all references to 'dangerous' topics, as well as the parts mentioning or just hinting at her former critical positions and those having a
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in 1920, but was eventually defeated and sidelined, narrowly avoiding her own expulsion from the party altogether. From 1922 on, she was appointed to various diplomatic posts abroad, serving in Norway, Mexico and Sweden. In 1943, she was promoted to the title of ambassador to Sweden. Kollontai
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Though Kollontai believed in the eventual obsolescence of the traditional family, she held that institution marriage could survive if it underwent a radical transformation. She advocated for a transformed marriage that would be compatible with many other social relations, such as friendship.
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The resurgence of radicalism in the 1960s and the growth of the feminist movement in the 1970s spurred a new interest in the life and writings of Alexandra Kollontai all around the world. A spate of books and pamphlets by and about Kollontai were subsequently published, including full-length
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over factories and generally over "the management of the national economy", on the grounds that the construction of a communist society could only be carried out by the industrial proletariat through its class work in history and through the intelligence it would acquire in concrete economic
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The masses do not believe in the opposition. They greet every statement of the opposition with smiles. Is it possible that the opposition thinks the masses' memory is so short? If they come across defects in the party, in the political line, who, if not the famous members of the opposition,
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union of two equal members of the workers' state who are united by love and mutual respect. In place of the individual and egoistic family, a great universal family of workers will develop, in which all the workers, men and women, will above all be comrades. – Alexandra Kollontai (1920),
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Nevertheless, despite subsequent misunderstandings with the former leaders of the Workers' Opposition and Kollontai's own resentment at their having renounced the pamphlet she had written to support the faction, on 5 July 1921 she tried again "to help by speaking on their behalf to the
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Alexandra was a good student growing up, sharing her father's interest in history, and mastering a range of languages. She spoke French with her mother and sisters, English with her nanny, Finnish with the peasants at a family estate inherited from her maternal grandfather in Kuusa (in
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in 1914, Kollontai left Germany due to the German social democrats' support of the war. Kollontai was strongly opposed to the war and very outspoken against it, and in June 1915 she broke with the Mensheviks and officially joined the Bolsheviks, "those who most consistently fought
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Kollontai felt that by liberating women and men from their traditionally hierarchical roles, communism would free marriage from the "conjugal slavery of the past", allowing spouses to thrive in egalitarian marriages grounded in mutual love and trust. As Kollontai wrote in 1920:
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exile for over twenty years, Kollontai gave up "her fight for reform and for women, retreating into relative obscurity" and bowing to the new political climate. She discarded her feminist concerns and "offered no objection to the patriarchal legislation of 1926 and the
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According to John Simkin, on 27 February trade unionists supporting the Workers' Opposition published a proclamation calling for 'freedom of speech, press and assembly for all who labour', and for the 'liberation of all arrested Socialists and non-partisan workers.'
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My mother and the English nanny who reared me were demanding. There was order in everything: to tidy up toys myself, to lay my underwear on a little chair at night, to wash neatly, to study my lessons on time, to treat the servants with respect. Mama demanded this.
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On 13 March Kollontai boasted before the congress "that it was members of the Workers' Opposition faction who had been 'the first' to volunteer 'for Konstadt' and thus 'to fulfil our duty in the name of Communism and the international workers' revolution'."
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of sexuality. The quote "...the satisfaction of one's sexual desires should be as simple as getting a glass of water" is often mistakenly attributed to her. This is likely a distortion of the moment in her short story "Three Generations" when a young female
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Years later, she wrote about her marriage, "We separated although we were in love because I felt trapped. I was detached, , because of the revolutionary upsettings rooted in Russia." In 1898 she left little Mikhail with her parents to study economics in
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in the hope that she would forget Vladimir, but the pair remained committed to one another despite it all and married in 1893. Alexandra became pregnant soon after her marriage and bore a son, Mikhail, in 1894. She devoted her time to reading radical
2914:, she was arrested along with many other Bolshevik leaders, but was given again her full freedom of movement in September: she was then a member of the party's Central Committee and as such she voted for the policy of armed uprising that led to the 4162: 2876:
to speak about war and politics, and to renew her relationship with her son Mikhail; in 1916, she had arranged for him to avoid conscription by going to the United States to work on Russian orders from U.S. factories. In 1917, upon hearing of the
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residence". Notwithstanding, it should also be pointed out that, even so, Kollontai did not enjoy a full liberty of action and had to worry about the possible fates of her family. It might not have been pure chance if both her only son and her
494:. "Shura", as she was called growing up, was close to her father, with whom she shared an analytical bent and an interest in history and politics. Her relationship with her mother, for whom she was named, was more complex. She later recalled: 2837: 5905:
Novikova, N., Ghodsee, K. (2023). Alexandra Kollontai (1872–1952): Communism as the Only Way Toward Women's Liberation. In: de Haan, F. (eds) The Palgrave Handbook of Communist Women Activists around the World. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.
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She went into exile, to Germany, in 1908 after publishing "Finland and Socialism", which called on the Finnish people to rise up against oppression within the Russian Empire. She traveled across western Europe and became acquainted with
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In the first Soviet government, formed in the fall of 1917, Kollontai was appointed people's commissar (minister) for social welfare. She was the only woman in the cabinet but also the first woman in history who became a member of the
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During this time, Kollontai was also in the process of a painful divorce from her second husband, Pavel Dybenko, which made her want a change of scenery. In the latter half of 1922 she wrote a "personal letter" to the newly appointed
3221:: "Everything's changed so much. What can I do about this? One cannot go against the 'apparatus'. For my part, I have put my principles aside in a corner of my conscience and I pursue as best I can the policies they dictate to me". 3941:. At the opening session of the congress, on entering the foyer, Lenin saw Kollontai conversing with a French delegate, and immediately rushed over to the latter, blatantly marvelling that he still spoke "to this individual" ( 2737:, an activist in the budding Marxist movement in St. Petersburg. Stasova began to use Kollontai as a courier, transporting parcels of illegal writings to unknown individuals, which were delivered upon utterance of a password. 449:
censors, presumably for showing insufficient Russian nationalist zeal. Alexandra's mother, Alexandra Alexandrovna Masalina (Massalina) (1848–1899), was the daughter of Alexander Feodorovich Masalin (Massalin) (1809–1859), a
388:, the then-new women's department of the Central Committee that was aimed at improving the status of women in the Soviet Union. She was a champion of women's liberation, and later came to be recognized as a key figure in 4216:
secondhand information) to the effect that Kollontai had once been on the very verge of arrest. During a visit of hers in Moscow, an order had already been issued for her arrest, but, "before could be implemented, the
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every sphere of creative activity, our state has simultaneously ensured all the conditions necessary for her to fulfil her natural obligation – that of being a mother bringing up her children and mistress of her home.
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The degree of her adherence to the prevailing ideas of the Stalinist regime, whether it was spontaneous or not, may be gauged from the opening of an article she wrote in 1946 for a Russian magazine. It bore the title
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However, Flor Anisimovich Mitin (1882–1937) and Nikolai Vladimirovich Kuznetsov (1884–1937), two others of the signatories of the appeal to the Comintern, who were not "old Bolsheviks", were expelled from the party
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These words were reported by Kollontai's erstwhile diplomatic colleague and fighting comrade Marcel Body (1894–1984) in the obituary he published in 1952 in a political review ("Mémoires: Alexandra Kollontaï";
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also adds she "was uniquely privy to one meeting of the inner sanctum of the League Council" (Sluga, Glenda (2015): "Women, Feminism and Twentieth-Century Internationalism", in id. and Clavin, Patricia (eds):
4120:, Milan, Feltrinelli, 1975, p. 67). Fetscher's book presents a collation of both the versions written by Kollontai, the initial draft and the second expurgated one. The two versions are also collated in the 3334:(whom she had much supported at the beginning of his career) also came unscathed through the persecution of the Stalinist regime, to the establishment of which she had, however, significantly contributed. 2893:
too got back to Russia in April 1917, Kollontai was the only major leader of the Petrograd Bolsheviks who immediately voiced her full support for his radical and nonconformist new proposals (the so-called
4388: 3848:"The library loaned maps, globes, textbooks, and other materials to groups meeting in various parts of the city and sent out illegal populist and Marxist tracts under the cover of the legal activity." 4383:Обзор Русско-Турецкой войны 1877-1878 гг. на Балканском полуостровѣ / Obzor Russko-Turet︠s︡koĭ voĭny 1877-1878 gg. na Balkanskom poluostrovi︠e︡ (St. Petersburg: V. Gosudarstvennoi tipografii, 1900) ( 2799:
in 1903, Kollontai did not side with either faction at first, and "offered her services to both factions". In 1906, however, disapproving of "the hostile position taken by the Bolsheviks towards the
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women, and was further distrustful that bourgeois champions of feminism would continue to support their working class counterparts after succeeding in their struggle for "general women's" rights:
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had her name removed from the list of orators and insisted that she should not take the floor. When she 'proved recalcitrant, Trotsky forbade her to speak and issued a decree, in the name of the
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The saga of her parents' long and difficult struggle to be together in spite of the norms of society would color and inform Alexandra Kollontai's own views of relationships, sex, and marriage.
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established them and built them? It seems that the policy of the party and the structure of the apparatus become unfit only from the day that a group of oppositionists breaks with the party.
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terrible news (Farnsworth , p. 960). Farnsworth does not mention the suicide's name, but, according to the Russian Knowledge (XXG), the name of the only male child of Adèle (Аглаиде) and
611: 6149: 5611: 361:, Kollontai returned to Russia. She supported Lenin's radical proposals and, as a member of the party's Central Committee, voted for the policy of armed uprising which led to the 6059: 3866: 455:
marriage which turned out to be unhappy, and eventually she divorced Mravinsky in order to marry Mikhail Domontovich, with whom she had fallen in love. Russian opera singer
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proposed by Lenin, warning that it 'threatened to disillusion workers, to strengthen the peasantry and petty bourgeoisie, and to facilitate the rebirth of capitalism'.
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Kollontai was outspoken against bureaucratic influences over the Communist Party and its undemocratic internal practices. To that end, she sided with the left-wing
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and others, but with fewer and fewer results". Which eventually drove her to seek comfort even in "nostalgia for quieter and more hopeful prerevolutionary times" (
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between Russia and Finland broke out; it has been said that it was largely due to her influence that Sweden remained neutral. After the war, she received
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against Lenin's Bolsheviks. Exiled from Russia in 1908, Kollontai toured Western Europe and the United States and campaigned against participation in the
6214: 6154: 6134: 711: 586: 5183:. New York/London: Routledge. Chapter 3 ("A Community of Men: Marxism and Women"), Section: "Marxist feminists: Zetkin, Kollontai, Goldman", pp. 40–54. 6194: 6109: 2902:, and "for the rest of 1917, was a constant agitator for revolution in Russia as a speaker, leaflet writer and worker on the Bolshevik women's paper 2684: 6054: 5685:
Farnsworth, Beatrice (2010). "Conversing with Stalin, Surviving the Terror: The Diaries of Aleksandra Kollontai and the Internal Life of Politics".
5612:"'A Proletarian From a Novel': Politics, Identity, and Emotion in the Relationship between Alexander Shliapnikov and Alexandra Kollontai, 1911-1935" 3070:, ordering all members of the Russian delegation to "obey the directives of the party".' Predictably, the appeal of the 22 was unsuccessful. At the 2764:
Kollontai became interested in Marxist ideas while studying the history of working movements in Zürich, under Herkner, later described by her as a
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In this regard, Kollontai's critique of women's societal position under capitalism is both reminiscent of and distinct from the Marxist feminist
3181:, on the grounds of "her diplomatic efforts to end war and hostilities between the Soviet Union and Finland during the negotiations in 1940-44." 6204: 2772: 1510: 1492: 921: 373:. She was appointed People's Commissar for Social Welfare in the first Soviet government, but soon resigned due to her opposition to the peace 335: 1882: 5887: 5759: 5675: 5579: 5266: 4426: 4326: 4287: 4070: 3002:
In the run-up to the congress, scheduled for 8–16 March, at Shliapnikov's urgent request, Kollontai had a pamphlet printed with the title of
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so poor, to which her daughter replied that she would work as a teacher to help make ends meet. Her mother bitterly scoffed at the notion:
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Alexandra Kollontai, nee Domontovich, who held the distinctions of being the first woman cabinet minister and the first woman ambassador
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ever betray close friends during the Terror. On the contrary, "Kollontai tried as well as she could to help her friends, appealing to
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first, and as a result Mravinskii was saved from harsh Siberian exile, stripped of his rights and exiled to European Russia instead.
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A Biographical Dictionary of Women's Movements and Feminisms: Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries
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for fifty years (1938–1988), was the only son of Mravina's brother Alexander Kostantinovich and thus Kollontai's half nephew.
5002: 3054:", whereby several former members of the Workers' Opposition and other party members of working class origin appealed to the 2911: 2864: 963: 861: 751: 676: 370: 3925: 3895:, 4 January 1981). Both Dybenko and Shliapnikov were People's Commissars alongside Kollontai in the first Soviet government. 2783:
causing hundreds of deaths and injuries. At the time of the split in the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party between the
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against the undemocratic internal practices in use within the Russian party. When 'Kollontai attempted to speak before the
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Kollontai was one of the seventeen women delegates to the League's General Assembly throughout two decades of activity;
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Kollontai's final political action as an oppositionist within the Communist Party was her co-signing of the so-called "
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member argues that sex "is as meaningless as drinking a glass of vodka to quench one's thirst." In number 18 of her
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Allen, Barbara C. (2007). "Early dissent within the party: Alexander Shliapnikov and the letter of the twenty-two".
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Three years earlier, in 1926, when she was requested to write her own autobiography for a series on famous women by
6184: 6089: 6084: 5649: 2307: 2167: 2142: 2067: 1430: 1228: 671: 31: 3885:"Bolshevik leaders reacted to the difference in their ages like cackling village gossips," adds Simon Karlinsky (" 1314: 6159: 5954: 5843: 4016: 3368:
diplomat in the 1930s with unconventional views on sexuality, probably inspired by Kollontai, had been played by
2775:
in 1899 at the age of 27. In 1905, Kollontai was a witness to the series of events in Saint Petersburg, known as
1198: 816: 776: 706: 691: 3325:, and so many friends of hers were executed. And, it has been noted, at the time she "was safe in her sumptuous 3298:
Alexandra Kollontai died in Moscow on 9 March 1952, less than a month from her 80th birthday, and was buried at
6079: 6030:
Members of the Central Committee of the 6th Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (Bolsheviks)
4005: 3691: 3558: 3051: 2670: 2400: 766: 686: 636: 316: 5872:
Four Socialist Reformers of Socialism: Alexandra Kollontai, Andrei Platonov, Robert Havemenn, and Stefan Heym
4997: 2957:
or "Women's Department" in 1919 . This organization worked to improve the conditions of women's lives in the
6189: 6099: 4915: 4648: 4243: 3133: 3055: 3012: 2849: 2565: 2545: 1378: 1110: 993: 846: 811: 631: 626: 581: 438: 374: 4749: 3704:
The Workers Opposition in the Russian Communist Party: The Fight for Workers Democracy in the Soviet Union.
4238:
Kollontai was awarded the Order of the Aztec Eagle on the basis of her friendship with Mexican Presidents
4088: 2975: 2493: 1817: 1223: 1155: 1145: 1133: 1065: 509: 396: 312: 3165:'s praises. During late April 1943, Kollontai may have been involved in abortive peace negotiations with 445:. In the 1880s he wrote a study of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. This study was confiscated by the 5505: 5048: 4037: 3613: 3601: 3445: 3349: 3322: 2979: 2853: 2830: 2765: 1637: 1482: 1085: 1058: 916: 866: 786: 731: 358: 331: 5442: 4267: 4239: 2919: 2749:. She then paid a visit to England, where she met members of the British socialist movement, including 2302: 1277: 5467: 5416: 3924:
An English edition of the pamphlet (Solidarity (London) Pamphlet no.7, 1961) is accessible on line at
3313:. She has sometimes been criticized and even held up to contempt for not raising her voice during the 2757:. She returned to Russia in 1899, at which time she met Vladimir Ilych Ulyanov, better known today as 616: 6024: 6019: 4151: 3809: 3474:
realized communist society, industrial mechanization would ultimately replace so-called women's work:
3353: 3344: 3299: 3272: 3178: 2776: 2550: 2503: 2498: 2483: 2473: 2440: 2415: 2277: 2177: 1892: 1462: 1347: 1233: 1038: 1003: 953: 895: 741: 606: 559: 425:. After his participation in the war, he was appointed Provisional Governor of the Bulgarian city of 172: 4949: 6094: 4548: 4121: 3938: 3912: 3873: 3765: 3522: 3487: 3411: 3199: 3032: 3020: 2995: 2927: 2878: 2609: 2560: 2262: 2082: 2017: 1213: 1193: 1188: 1080: 1070: 1018: 1008: 926: 906: 761: 681: 576: 354: 311:
19 March] 1872 – 9 March 1952) was a Russian revolutionary, politician, diplomat and
5961: 5554: 5201: 3177:
by Scandinavian political circles, including the Finnish president and erstwhile Envoy to Moscow,
2986:, both of working class extraction. Three days earlier, on 25 January, after about a month delay, 2953:
She was the most prominent woman in the Soviet administration and was best known for founding the
2930:. During the revolutionary period, at the age of 45, she married 28-year-old revolutionary sailor 2729:
While Kollontai was initially drawn to the populist ideas of restructuring society based upon the
1607: 5976: 5879: 5875: 5772:
Bobroff, Anne (1979). "Alexandra Kollontai: Feminism, Workers' Democracy, and Internationalism".
5702: 5393: 5339: 5023: 4474: 4222: 3891: 3780: 3571:"The Social Basis of the Woman Question" ("Социальные основы женского вопроса"), a pamphlet, 1909 3339: 3338:
biographies by historians Cathy Porter, Beatrice Farnsworth, and Barbara Evans Clements. In 1982
3207: 3203: 3162: 2915: 2622: 2604: 2582: 2508: 2445: 2435: 2385: 2342: 2047: 1772: 1742: 1577: 1437: 1263: 1243: 1183: 931: 834: 796: 656: 459:(stage name) was Kollontai's half-sister via her mother. The celebrated Soviet-Russian conductor 418: 366: 362: 2390: 2227: 2097: 4856: 4099:
in Norway, the words cannot be confirmed by any third source but appear completely verisimilar.
3911:
at Spartacus Educational). However, these positions appear much more in line with those of the
2978:, a left-wing faction of the party that had its roots in the trade union milieu and was led by 5918: 5883: 5847: 5755: 5719: 5671: 5636: 5575: 5385: 5331: 5287: 5262: 5184: 4832: 4422: 4322: 4314: 4283: 4066: 3975: 3831: 3553: 3406:
for her commitment to both women's liberation and Marxist ideals. She opposed the ideology of
3331: 3174: 3170: 3095: 3079: 3015:, and said clearly to her face: "For this you should not only be excluded, but shot as well." 2869: 2646: 2575: 2535: 2513: 2242: 2207: 2037: 1942: 1877: 1827: 1797: 1717: 1692: 1642: 1452: 1383: 1357: 1309: 1238: 1218: 1090: 1053: 1033: 1023: 1013: 986: 948: 891: 460: 456: 3169:, her German counterpart in Stockholm. She was also a member of the Soviet delegation to the 5694: 5377: 5323: 5015: 4935: 4275: 4012: 3822: 3775: 3407: 3403: 3090: 3063: 2937: 2746: 2658: 2634: 2570: 2555: 2357: 2347: 2282: 2182: 2117: 2092: 2042: 2007: 1967: 1802: 1762: 1727: 1617: 1597: 1547: 1542: 1522: 1477: 1447: 1393: 1342: 1337: 1304: 1203: 1160: 1105: 1048: 651: 533: 513: 389: 284: 137: 3937:
Lenin's wrathful resentment against Kollontai is also shown by another episode reported by
413:
Kollontai's father, General Mikhail Alekseyevich Domontovich (1830–1902), descended from a
5983: 5754:. Glebe NSW: Pascal Press (article: "Alexandra Kollontai (1872–1952)", pp. 187–190). 5740: 5228: 4944:
The whole contribution by Silone in Italian is accessible for free online under the title
4927: 4923: 4134: 4019: 3827: 3805: 3747: 3733: 3206:". The following words she allegedly pronounced in a private conversation with her friend 2820: 2697: 2587: 2478: 2425: 2337: 2272: 2252: 2192: 2087: 2062: 2027: 2022: 2012: 1982: 1937: 1927: 1792: 1732: 1687: 1652: 1632: 1592: 1567: 1413: 1332: 1028: 958: 696: 378: 347: 5200:
Saint Petersburg: Znamie. Chapter 3: "The Struggle for Political Rights" (quotation from
3861:
These "personal friends" were specially mentioned by Kollontai in the first draft of her
3681:. Cathy Porter, trans. London: Virago, 1981. Also: New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1982. 3457:
Kollontai argued that "...sexuality is a human instinct as natural as hunger or thirst."
2852:(1867–1946), an agrarian scientist, she started a love affair with another fellow exile, 2848:
In 1911, while abruptly breaking off her long-term relationship with her faction comrade
2430: 1997: 5836: 5629: 4970: 4919: 4156: 4109: 3961: 3534: 3361: 3310: 3104: 2890: 2816: 2796: 2758: 2709: 2592: 2420: 2322: 2257: 2247: 2237: 2232: 2152: 2132: 2122: 2112: 2102: 2072: 2052: 1992: 1987: 1972: 1957: 1947: 1867: 1847: 1837: 1832: 1822: 1747: 1722: 1712: 1707: 1682: 1672: 1647: 1562: 1557: 1552: 1527: 1208: 1140: 1095: 871: 716: 491: 426: 320: 141: 5950: 4141:(Moscow, Progress Publishers, 1984) is accessible online at Marxists Internet Archive. 3906: 3741: 2826: 6013: 5706: 5397: 5343: 4931: 4911: 4279: 4034: 3419: 3391: 3318: 3138: 3117: 2931: 2873: 2842: 2803:" and despite her being generally a left-winger, she decided to join the Mensheviks. 2788: 2780: 2754: 2734: 2730: 2287: 2157: 2147: 2057: 1932: 1812: 1787: 1782: 1752: 1677: 1582: 1532: 1457: 1442: 1388: 1362: 1120: 901: 339: 237: 5932: 4633: 4242:
del Río (21 May 1895 – 19 October 1970), who served between 1934 and 1940, and
3669:
Alix Holt, trans. London: Allison & Busby, 1977. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
327:. She was the first woman to be a cabinet minister, and the first woman ambassador. 80: 17: 4096: 4057: 3526: 3365: 3233: 3166: 3036: 2958: 2945: 2895: 2812: 2808: 2530: 2352: 2327: 2292: 2222: 2217: 2202: 2187: 2137: 2127: 1977: 1962: 1952: 1902: 1872: 1857: 1842: 1807: 1627: 1587: 1537: 1487: 1408: 1352: 5381: 4833:"Speech in Discussion of the Policies of the Russian Communist Party July 5, 1921" 3711:
A comprehensive bibliography of Russian-language material by Kollontai appears in
478: 5996: 5665: 3965: 3872:
being however crossed out in the second expurgated version (quotation drawn from
3062:
on 26 February 1922 on behalf of the views expressed in the appeal,' Trotsky and
5365: 5240: 4026: 4009: 3760: 3491:
women into the public sphere, Kollontai questioned the status of working women:
3415: 3369: 3314: 3309:
who managed to live into the 1950s, other than Stalin and his devoted supporter
2857: 2367: 2312: 2267: 2162: 2107: 2032: 1862: 1852: 1757: 1737: 1697: 1622: 1612: 1602: 1403: 1100: 998: 973: 661: 596: 350:. In 1915, she broke with the Mensheviks and became a member of the Bolsheviks. 4168: 3212: 3198:, which deprived Soviet women of many of the gains they had achieved after the 2918:. At the Second All-Russian Congress of Soviets on 26 October, she was elected 5907: 5698: 4169:"Comitato Centrale, eletto dal VI Congresso del POSDR(b) 3(16).8.1917, membri" 3785: 3723: 3158: 3150: 3124: 3040: 2784: 2779:, where tsarist soldiers opened fire on unarmed demonstrators in front of the 2362: 2172: 2002: 1912: 1907: 1897: 1777: 1702: 1662: 1657: 1497: 1297: 1272: 968: 591: 434: 414: 343: 324: 293: 217: 209: 42: 5493: 5389: 5335: 5327: 5990: 3755: 3441: 3395: 3374: 3326: 3218: 3154: 2954: 2907: 2792: 2597: 2540: 2488: 2468: 2297: 1922: 1517: 1472: 1282: 385: 4173:
Guida alla storia del Partito Comunista e dell'Unione Sovietica 1898 - 1991
2964:
In political life, Kollontai increasingly became an internal critic of the
2742: 5557:, translated by Salvator Attansio, proofed and corrected by Chris Clayton. 5540: 5221: 4358: 4361:[Diplomat Alexandra Kollontai through the eyes of her grandson]. 4246:(24 April 1897 – 13 October 1955), who served between 1940 and 1946. 4030: 3450: 3044: 2899: 2714: 2523: 2518: 2317: 1398: 851: 334:
general, Kollontai embraced radical politics in the 1890s and joined the
256: 4116:, Munich, Rogner & Bernhard, 1970 (quoted from the Italian edition, 3685: 3173:. Kollontai retired in 1945. In 1946 and 1947 she was nominated for the 2653: 323:'s government in 1917–1918, she was a highly prominent woman within the 5027: 3830:
terrorists – who managed to plant dynamite in this manner anyway.
2718: 1292: 541: 446: 50: 5838:
Alexandra Kollontai: Socialism, Feminism, and the Bolshevik Revolution
5311: 5166:
Lokaneeta, Jinee (2001), "Alexandra Kollontai and Marxist Feminism".
3225: 3146: 3142: 3128: 3075: 2970: 2708:
Her parents forbade the relationship and sent Alexandra on a tour of
1287: 505: 157: 5244: 5019: 4385:
Review of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878 on the Balkan Peninsula
4137:
edited by Sally Ryan (2000) and Chris Clayton (2006) and drawn from
433:. In May 1879, he was called back to St. Petersburg. He entertained 400:
retired from diplomatic service in 1945 and died in Moscow in 1952.
338:(RSDLP) in 1899. During the RSDLP ideological split, she sided with 5800:
The Palgrave Handbook of Communist Women Activists around the World
5449:(Fall 2021 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University 3643:
Sexual Relations and the Class Struggle: Love and the New Morality.
5247:("On Everyday Life: Young People and the "Glass of Water" Theory). 4023: 3517: 3385: 3266: 3089: 2936: 2836: 2825: 2696: 477: 451: 430: 101: 5312:"Crashing the Party: The radical legacy of a Soviet-era feminist" 3418:
women but would do little to address the immediate conditions of
3307:
Bolsheviks' Central Committee that had led the October Revolution
486:
Alexandra Mikhailovna Domontovich was born on 31 March [
384:
In 1919, Kollontai was a leading figure in the foundation of the
5366:"Alexandra Kollontai: Socialist Feminism in Theory and Practice" 4217: 3808:: Domontovits is probably the common alternative spelling (see: 3663:
Highland Park, MI: International Socialist Publishing Co., 1974.
3455:
Theses on Communist Morality in the Sphere of Marital Relations,
2800: 5664:
de Haan, Francisca; Daskalova, Krasimira; Loutfi, Anna (2006).
5660:. London-New York: Macmillan-St. Martin's Press, parts I and II 5259:
The Dictatorship of Sex: Lifestyle Advice for the Soviet Masses
4998:"Stalin and the Prospects of a Separate Peace in World War II" 4392:(Book on Demand Ltd., 2015) (in Russian language, not English) 4091:
has been reproduced online, albeit with many a copy error, at
3804:
Alexandra Kollontai's original family name has been variously
3011:
party', threatened to submit her pamphlet to the court of the
822:
Their Morals and Ours: The class foundations of moral practice
5863:
Red Valkyries: Feminist Lessons from Five Revolutionary Women
417:
family that traced its ancestry back to the 13th century and
5441:
Ferguson, Ann; Hennessy, Rosemary; Nagel, Mechthild (2021),
4732: 4730: 3637:
The Autobiography of a Sexually Emancipated Communist Woman.
3217:
in 1929 give a suggestion of her attitude towards advancing
2833:, Kollontai's fighting comrade and, for some time, her lover 6035:
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Soviet Union)
4387:) (St. Petersburg: State Printing House, 1900) – Also see: 792:
An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx's Capital
5572:
Alexander Shlyapnikov, 1885-1937: Life of an Old Bolshevik
5261:. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press. p. 37. 3262:
The Soviet Woman — a Full and Equal Citizen of Her Country
2990:
finally published the faction's platform for the upcoming
5170:. Vol. 36, No. 17 (28 April – 4 May 2001), pp. 1405–1412. 4095:
Website. As they were pronounced during a tête-à-tête at
3947:. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. pp. 97–98 4274:, Oxford, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 1–2, 4272:
The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
612:
The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
5506:
The Nobel Peace Prize: Revelations from the Soviet Past
4163:
Bolshevik Central Committee elected at the 6th Congress
3145:(1926–27), again in Norway (1927–30) and eventually in 5785:
Body, Marcel (1952). "Mémoires: Alexandra Kollontai".
4114:
Autobiographie einer sexuell emanzipierten Kommunistin
5049:"Nomination archive: Alexandra Mikhaylovna Kollontay" 4504: 4502: 3352:
by Kollontai. For example, the film was shown in the
3094:
Kollontai after being awarded the Grand Cross of the
2934:, while keeping her surname from her first marriage. 5631:
Bolshevik Feminist: The Life of Aleksandra Kollontai
3915:
than with the mainstream of the Workers' Opposition.
6115:
Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
4753:translated by Barbara Allen for marxists.org from: 4401: 4399: 4139:
Alexandra Kollontai: Selected Articles and Speeches
3967:
Kronstadt 1917-1921. The fate of a Soviet democracy
3706:
St. Petersburg, FL: Red and Black Publishers, 2009.
3657:
San Pedro, CA: League for Economic Democracy, 1973.
3358:
A Wave of Passion: The Life of Alexandra Kollontai,
262: 251: 243: 231: 197: 187: 179: 168: 147: 127: 122: 102:
People's Commissar of State Protection of the RSFSR
100: 64: 5835: 5628: 4108:Letter to Helga Kern, 26 July 1926, reproduced in 3039:retorted by even likening her to "an Amazon", and 5991:"St-Petersbourg workers of the textile industry," 5417:"Communism and the Family by Alexandra Kollontai" 4472:Kollontai, Aleksandra (1945). "Iz vozpominanii". 3356:. Kollontai was the subject of the 1994 TV film, 2702:International Socialist Congress, Copenhagen 1910 5494:Alexandra Kollontai – the Soviet Ambassador 5116:. Harmondswoth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 283. 4539: 4537: 4535: 4533: 4531: 4529: 4390:Overview of the Russian-Turkish War of 1877-1878 4065:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 69, 2974:on 28 January 1921, she publicly sided with the 421:. Her father served as a cavalry officer in the 30:"Kollontai" redirects here. For other uses, see 5829:. New York and Toronto: Longmans, Green and Co. 5820:. New York and Toronto: Longmans, Green and Co. 4977:, London, Orbach and Chambers, 1972, p. 105 ff. 3493: 3424: 3277: 3239: 3185:Political retreat and attitude toward Stalinism 3019:promptly and unconditionally sided against the 2704:. Alexandra Kollontai holds a delegate's hand. 522: 496: 6150:Russian Social Democratic Labour Party members 5216: 5214: 5088:"The Menshivik, Bolshevik, Stalinist feminist" 4627: 4625: 4063:Internationalisms: A Twentieth-Century History 5997:Newspaper clippings about Alexandra Kollontai 5818:Alexandra Kollontay: Ambassadress from Russia 4975:Autobiography of a sexually emancipated woman 4359:"Дипломат Александра Коллонтай глазами внука" 3149:(1930–45), where she was finally promoted to 2942:Third Congress of the Communist International 2926:, but she soon resigned in opposition to the 2678: 572:The Condition of the Working Class in England 302: 8: 5508:. Nobelprize.org. Retrieved on 16 June 2011. 5081: 5079: 3887:The Menshivic, Bolshevik, Stalinist feminist 3675:. Cathy Porter, trans. London: Virago, 1977 3414:, that would provide political equality for 3031:". In her speech, she bitterly attacked the 2881:, Kollontai returned from Norway to Russia. 567:Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 6060:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members 5908:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13127-1_3 5181:Feminist Theory and the Philosophies of Man 4313:Boynton, Victoria; Malin, Jo, eds. (2005). 3974:: Cambridge University Press. p. 256. 3103:Italian writer and former communist leader 2900:Executive Committee of the Petrograd Soviet 5539:(in Russian). 26 July 2017. Archived from 4421:. Lanham/Toronto/Oxford: Scarecrow, p. 1. 3593:"The Attitude of the Russian Socialists," 3114:General Secretary of the Central Committee 2721:political literature and writing fiction. 2685: 2671: 1259: 712:Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses 587:The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte 528: 79: 61: 27:Soviet politician and diplomat (1872–1952) 6210:Magazine founders from the Russian Empire 6145:Revolutionaries of the Russian Revolution 6050:Ambassadors of the Soviet Union to Sweden 6045:Ambassadors of the Soviet Union to Norway 6040:Ambassadors of the Soviet Union to Mexico 5899:Red Love: A Reader on Alexandra Kollontai 5635:. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 5443:"Feminist Perspectives on Class and Work" 5245:"О БЫТЕ:МОЛОДЕЖЬ И ТЕОРИЯ „СТАКАНА ВОДЫ"" 4708: 4706: 4029:(1920), and the 'first secretary' of the 3667:Selected Writings of Alexandra Kollontai. 3402:Kollontai is regarded as a key figure in 6220:Trade Representative of the Soviet Union 5734:"Women on the left: Alexandra Kollontai" 5658:Communism and Social Democracy 1914-1931 5206:Selected Writings of Alexandra Kollontai 4565:. Stockholm: Bonniers. pp. 218–219. 4167:Hirschkowitz, Naftali, ed. (2005–2020). 4124:accessible at Marxists Internet Archive. 3649:Women Workers Struggle for their Rights. 6140:Marxist writers from the Russian Empire 5962:"For socialism and women's liberation," 5447:The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 4258: 3797: 3440:Kollontai is known for her advocacy of 1370: 1322: 1262: 540: 5870:Lilie, Stuart A.; Riser, John (2009). 5286:. Translated by Cathy Porter. Virago. 4889: 4868: 4818: 4806: 4794: 4782: 4770: 4736: 4685: 4661: 4444:The Mrovinskys: "To Serve the Emperor" 4419:Yevgeny Mravinsky: The Noble Conductor 4087:, No. 14, April 1952, pp. 12–24). The 3434:The Social Basis of the Woman Question 2944:(1921). Alexandra Kollontai alongside 2773:Russian Social Democratic Labour Party 1493:Socialism with Chinese characteristics 336:Russian Social Democratic Labour Party 5716:Alexandra Kollontai Selected Writings 5670:. Central European University Press. 5486: 5484: 5482: 5480: 5411: 5409: 5407: 5359: 5357: 5355: 5353: 5305: 5303: 4986:Erofeev, V. (2011), Diplomat, Moskva. 4319:Encyclopedia of Women's Autobiography 4206:was Mikhail, the same as Kollontai's. 3394:from her friend Alexandra Kollontay, 2406:Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory 782:Change the World Without Taking Power 292: 7: 6130:Russian Constituent Assembly members 6105:People from Sankt-Peterburgsky Uyezd 5951:Alexandra Kollontai Internet Archive 5592:The NEP Era: Soviet Russia 1921-1928 5284:Love of Worker Bees and A Great Love 5126: 4721: 4616: 4604: 4592: 4580: 4568: 4520: 4508: 4493: 4481: 4459: 4405: 4345: 3849: 3836: 3712: 3582:), 9, 151–185, 1913 (republished in 3364:as the voice of Kollontai. A female 3317:, when, among countless others, her 3288:, 5, September–October 1946, pp. 3–4 3127:to the Soviet commercial mission in 255:professional revolutionary, writer, 5865:. New York and London: Verso Books. 5204:, translation by Alix Holt (1977): 5086:Karlinsky, Simon (4 January 1981). 4880:Farnsworth (2010), p. 949, note 24. 737:Marxism and the Oppression of Women 667:Theses on the Philosophy of History 6125:Communists from the Russian Empire 6120:Russian anti–World War I activists 5714:Holt, Alix (trans.), ed. (1980) . 5222:"Alexandra Kollontai and Red Love" 4268:"Kollontai, Alexandra (1872-1952)" 4197:Konstantin Alekseevich Domontovich 3698:The Essential Alexandra Kollontai. 3651:Bristol: Falling Wall Press, 1973. 3645:Bristol: Falling Wall Press, 1972. 2968:and, with an article published in 2841:Alexandra and her second husband, 25: 6215:Russian people of Finnish descent 6155:Novelists from the Russian Empire 6135:Feminists from the Russian Empire 5938:Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon 5616:The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 5574:. Leiden: Brill. pp. 84–85. 4936:Crossman, Richard Howard Stafford 3627:London: J.M. Dent and Sons, 1932. 3547:Order of the Red Banner of Labour 3541:Order of the Red Banner of Labour 3382:Contributions to Marxist feminism 3323:former lover and fighting comrade 2854:Alexander Gavrilovich Shliapnikov 757:Time, Labor and Social Domination 132:Alexandra Mikhailovna Domontovich 6195:First women government ministers 6110:Recipients of the Order of Lenin 5915:Alexandra Kollontai: A Biography 5627:Clements, Barbara Evans (1979). 5364:Roelofs, Joan (2 January 2018). 5140:"Recent films from West-Germany" 4973:, 'Afterword', in A. Kollontaj, 4750:Theses of the Workers Opposition 4697: 4673: 4280:10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp0858 3740: 3726: 3639:n.c. : Herder and Herder, n.d. . 3605:(Василиса Малыгина). novel, 1923 3590:), Moscow, 1919, pp. 3–35). 3098:at the Norwegian embassy in 1946 2994:: it mainly advocated unionized 2922:for Social Welfare in the first 2652: 2640: 2628: 2464:21st-century communist theorists 807:Towards Socialism or Capitalism? 722:How Europe Underdeveloped Africa 642:Essays on Marx's Theory of Value 548: 465:Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra 266: 6055:Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery 5809:Alejandra Kollontai (1872-1952) 5257:Bernstein, Frances Lee (2007). 5231:. (Retrieved 24 February 2016). 5208:. London: Allison & Busby). 5012:American Historical Association 3810:Genealogy of Mihail Domontovits 3771:Women in the Russian Revolution 3700:Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2008. 3574:"New Woman" ("Новая женщина"), 3350:the novella with the same title 3305:She was the only member of the 3189:Being sent abroad in a sort of 3153:in 1943. When Kollontai was in 3141:. As such, she later served in 3029:Third Congress of the Comintern 1166:Theory of historical trajectory 1044:Dictatorship of the proletariat 747:Hegemony and Socialist Strategy 647:History and Class Consciousness 602:Critique of the Gotha Programme 429:, and later Military Consul in 289:Александра Михайловна Коллонтай 281:Alexandra Mikhailovna Kollontai 247:Mikhail Vladimirovich Kollontai 5654:A History of Socialist Thought 5532:Биография Александры Коллонтай 5370:International Critical Thought 5003:The American Historical Review 4561:Kollontai, Aleksandra (1945). 4543:Kollontai, Aleksandra (1926), 3686:Selected Articles and Speeches 3584:New morality and working class 3271:Alexandra Kollontai's tomb at 3248:Oppozitsiia i partiinaia massa 3123:Initially, she was sent as an 2865:Russian entry into World War I 2745:, Switzerland, with Professor 964:Socially necessary labour time 862:Philosophy in the Soviet Union 752:The Sublime Object of Ideology 677:A Critique of Soviet Economics 235:Vladimir Ludvigovich Kollontai 1: 6205:Writers from Saint Petersburg 5834:Farnsworth, Beatrice (1980). 5811:. Madrid: Ediciones del Orto. 5802:. London: Palgrave Macmillan. 5718:. USA: Norton & Company. 5598:. Vol. 1. Archived from 5445:, in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), 5382:10.1080/21598282.2017.1419436 5282:Kollontai, Alexandra (1999). 5168:Economic and Political Weekly 4961:Farnsworth (2010), p. 949 ff. 4857:Shliapnikov: Appeal of the 22 4266:Zukas, Alex (20 April 2009), 3943:Balabanoff, Angelica (1964). 3617:. New York: Seven Arts, 1927. 885:Critique of political economy 525:chair and table in the house! 437:political views, favouring a 423:Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) 86: 39:Eastern Slavic naming customs 5861:Ghodsee, Kristen R. (2022). 5825:de Palnecia, Isabel (1940). 5816:de Palnecia, Isabel (1947). 5310:Ghodsee, Kristen R. (2018). 4942:. Bantam Books. p. 101. 4859:at Marxists Internet Archive 4112:'s afterword to Kollontai's 3588:Новая мораль и рабочий класс 3432:Alexandra Kollontai (1909), 2898:"). She was a member of the 922:Falling profit-rate tendency 702:The Society of the Spectacle 6001:20th Century Press Archives 5798:de Haan, Francisca (2023). 5468:"Communism and the Family," 4270:, in Ness, Immanuel (ed.), 3633:Sydney: D. B. Young, n.d. . 3597:March 1916, pp. 60–61. 3116:and her recent inquisitor, 2771:She became a member of the 2396:Capitalism Nature Socialism 912:Concrete and abstract labor 802:Capital in the Anthropocene 727:Social Justice and the City 622:The Accumulation of Capital 490:19 March] 1872 in 6236: 5901:. London: Sternberg Press. 5897:Masucci, Michelle (2020). 5750:Ringer, Ronald E. (2006). 5610:Allen, Barbara C. (2008). 5570:Allen, Barbara C. (2015). 4901:Farnsworth (2010), p. 949. 4637:, at Spartacus Educational 4227:A Proletarian From a Novel 3661:International Women's Day. 3043:loudly corrected: "Like a 672:Dialectic of Enlightenment 37:In this name that follows 36: 32:Kollontai (disambiguation) 29: 5955:Marxists Internet Archive 5844:Stanford University Press 5699:10.1017/S003767790000992X 4365:(in Russian). 2 June 2019 4175:(in Russian and Italian). 4017:First Republic of Armenia 3631:Communism and the Family. 2949:(front row, on her right) 817:Literature and Revolution 777:Late Victorian Holocausts 707:Pedagogy of the Oppressed 692:The Wretched of the Earth 303: 288: 274: 118: 107: 96: 78: 71: 6175:Soviet women in politics 5752:Excel HSC Modern History 5531: 5328:10.1215/07402775-7085877 4996:Mastny, Vojtech (1972). 4006:First Hungarian Republic 4004:She was preceded by the 3692:International Publishers 3655:The Workers' Opposition. 3559:Order of the Aztec Eagle 3503:Communism and the Family 3481:Communism and the Family 3468:Communism and the Family 3254:", 30 October 1927, p. 3 3139:Minister Plenipotentiary 3086:Soviet diplomatic career 3052:letter of the Twenty Two 2725:Early political activism 767:The Origin of Capitalism 637:The State and Revolution 463:, music director of the 6065:Communist women writers 5986:PermanentRevolution.net 5807:de Miguel, Ana (2001). 4547:, op. cit. (drawn from 4417:Tassie, Gregor (2005). 4093:La Battaille socialiste 3446:"glass of water" theory 3072:Eleventh Party Congress 3056:Communist International 3013:Communist International 3004:The Workers' Opposition 1468:Marxism–Leninism–Maoism 1111:Relations of production 994:Base and superstructure 847:Dialectical materialism 812:The Revolution Betrayed 632:Terrorism and Communism 627:Philosophical Notebooks 582:The Communist Manifesto 439:constitutional monarchy 375:treaty of Brest-Litovsk 238:Pavel Efimovich Dybenko 6180:Soviet women novelists 6170:Soviet women diplomats 6070:Female revolutionaries 5977:"Alexandra Kollontai," 5913:Porter, Cathy (1980). 5227:28 August 2017 at the 5112:Trotsky, Leon (1975). 4950:Il Sole-24 ORE Website 4315:"Aleksandra Kollontai" 4122:English online edition 3530: 3507: 3484: 3471: 3438: 3399: 3291: 3286:Sovetskaya zhenshchina 3275: 3257: 3099: 2950: 2912:Provisional Government 2845: 2834: 2705: 2411:Historical Materialism 1156:Proletarian revolution 1151:Primitive accumulation 1146:Historical determinism 527: 510:Grand Duchy of Finland 501: 483: 371:Provisional Government 5989:Gabrille Tousignant, 5739:27 April 2019 at the 5466:Kollontai, A. (1920) 5220:Ebert, Teresa (1999) 4755:Tasks of Trade Unions 3908:Alexander Shlyapnikov 3521: 3501:Alexandra Kollontai, 3476: 3463: 3389: 3270: 3093: 2940: 2840: 2831:Alexander Shliapnikov 2829: 2700: 2647:Philosophy portal 2441:Science & Society 1059:Democratic centralism 917:Factors of production 787:Caliban and the Witch 732:Women, Race and Class 481: 332:Imperial Russian Army 307:; 31 March [ 5543:on 30 December 2023. 5316:World Policy Journal 5179:Nye, Andrea (1988). 5147:Museum of Modern Art 4244:Manuel Ávila Camacho 3945:Impressions of Lenin 3913:Kronstadt insurgents 3354:Museum of Modern Art 3332:musician half-nephew 3300:Novodevichy Cemetery 3273:Novodevichy Cemetery 3196:constitution of 1936 3179:Juho Kusti Paasikivi 2992:Tenth Party Congress 2659:Socialism portal 2635:Communism portal 2504:History of communism 2499:Economic determinism 2484:Criticism of Marxism 2474:Creative destruction 1234:Marxism and religion 954:Scientific socialism 857:Philosophy of nature 742:Imagined Communities 607:Dialectics of Nature 377:in the ranks of the 313:Marxist theoretician 173:Novodevichy Cemetery 73:Александра Коллонтай 18:Aleksandra Kollontai 6200:Workers' Opposition 6075:Free love advocates 5933:Alexandra Kollontai 5931:Leppänen, Katarina 5827:I Must Have Liberty 5605:on 5 November 2021. 5518:The Voice Of Russia 4946:Uscita di sicurezza 4940:The God That Failed 4821:, pp. 183–184. 4809:, pp. 186–187. 4785:, pp. 182–184. 4739:, pp. 178–179. 4634:Alexandra Kollontai 3939:Angelica Balabanoff 3766:History of feminism 3715:, pp. 317–331. 3673:Love of Worker Bees 3552:Grand Cross of the 3523:Commemorative stamp 3488:Wages for Housework 3398:, 1 September 1918. 3204:October Revolutions 3137:and from August to 3060:Comintern Executive 3033:New Economic Policy 2976:Workers' Opposition 2928:Brest-Litovsk Peace 2879:February Revolution 2766:Marxist Revisionist 2391:Capital & Class 1071:False consciousness 1019:Commodity fetishism 1009:Class consciousness 927:Means of production 762:The Age of Extremes 682:The Long Revolution 617:What Is to Be Done? 577:The German Ideology 397:Workers' Opposition 355:February Revolution 353:Following the 1917 330:The daughter of an 66:Alexandra Kollontai 6165:Soviet politicians 5982:5 May 2009 at the 5960:Christine Thomas, 5917:. London: Virago. 5880:Edwin Mellen Press 5876:Lewiston, New York 5747:, 11 February 2012 5520:. vor.ru (Spanish) 5092:The New York Times 4761:, 25 January 1921. 4563:Den första etappen 4038:Nadezhda Stanchova 4008:representative to 3892:The New York Times 3781:Socialist Feminism 3531: 3400: 3340:Rosa von Praunheim 3276: 3163:Vyacheslav Molotov 3100: 2951: 2920:People's Commissar 2916:October Revolution 2885:Russian Revolution 2846: 2835: 2706: 2605:Worker cooperative 2583:Left-wing populism 2509:Left-wing politics 2446:Socialist Register 2436:Rethinking Marxism 1229:Literary criticism 932:Mode of production 797:Capitalist Realism 657:The Black Jacobins 484: 419:Daumantas of Pskov 367:Alexander Kerensky 363:October Revolution 317:People's Commissar 6185:Women ambassadors 6090:Marxist theorists 6085:Marxist feminists 5968:25 October 2009) 5889:978-0-7734-4773-8 5760:978-1-74125-246-0 5732:Morrison, Jenny, 5677:978-963-7326-39-4 5581:978-90-04-24853-3 5268:978-0-87580-371-5 4676:, pp. 78–79. 4664:, pp. 21–54. 4619:, pp. 18–19. 4427:978-0-8108-5427-7 4328:978-0-313-32739-1 4289:978-1-4051-9807-3 4071:978-1-107-64508-0 3832:Tsar Alexander II 3602:Vasilisa Malygina 3554:Order of St. Olav 3175:Nobel Peace Prize 3171:League of Nations 3134:Chargé d'affaires 3096:Order of St. Olav 2924:Soviet government 2906:". Following the 2870:social-patriotism 2858:the Soviet purges 2695: 2694: 2536:Political ecology 2514:Marxian economics 1453:Council communism 1421: 1420: 1348:Neue Marx-Lektüre 1310:Regulation school 1199:Cultural analysis 1091:Lumpenproletariat 1034:Cultural hegemony 1024:Communist society 1014:Classless society 949:Productive forces 687:Guerrilla Warfare 560:Theoretical works 461:Yevgeny Mravinsky 457:Yevgeniya Mravina 315:. Serving as the 278: 277: 16:(Redirected from 6227: 6160:Soviet novelists 5970:Socialism Today, 5928: 5902: 5893: 5866: 5857: 5841: 5830: 5821: 5812: 5803: 5794: 5781: 5729: 5710: 5681: 5646: 5634: 5623: 5606: 5604: 5597: 5585: 5558: 5551: 5545: 5544: 5527: 5521: 5515: 5509: 5503: 5497: 5492: 5488: 5475: 5464: 5458: 5457: 5456: 5454: 5438: 5432: 5431: 5429: 5427: 5421:www.marxists.org 5413: 5402: 5401: 5361: 5348: 5347: 5307: 5298: 5297: 5279: 5273: 5272: 5254: 5248: 5238: 5232: 5218: 5209: 5198: 5192: 5177: 5171: 5164: 5158: 5157: 5155: 5153: 5144: 5136: 5130: 5124: 5118: 5117: 5109: 5103: 5102: 5100: 5098: 5083: 5074: 5071: 5065: 5064: 5062: 5060: 5045: 5039: 5038: 5036: 5034: 4993: 4987: 4984: 4978: 4968: 4962: 4959: 4953: 4943: 4928:Koestler, Arthur 4924:Spender, Stephen 4908: 4902: 4899: 4893: 4887: 4881: 4878: 4872: 4866: 4860: 4854: 4848: 4847: 4845: 4843: 4828: 4822: 4816: 4810: 4804: 4798: 4792: 4786: 4780: 4774: 4768: 4762: 4746: 4740: 4734: 4725: 4719: 4713: 4710: 4701: 4695: 4689: 4683: 4677: 4671: 4665: 4659: 4653: 4649:Cultural Amnesia 4644: 4638: 4629: 4620: 4614: 4608: 4602: 4596: 4590: 4584: 4578: 4572: 4566: 4558: 4552: 4545:Autobiography... 4541: 4524: 4518: 4512: 4506: 4497: 4491: 4485: 4479: 4469: 4463: 4457: 4451: 4442:, Chapters One ( 4436: 4430: 4415: 4409: 4403: 4394: 4381: 4375: 4374: 4372: 4370: 4355: 4349: 4343: 4337: 4336: 4310: 4304: 4303: 4298: 4296: 4263: 4247: 4236: 4230: 4213: 4207: 4205: 4192: 4186: 4183: 4177: 4176: 4160: 4148: 4142: 4135:abridged version 4131: 4125: 4106: 4100: 4080: 4074: 4054: 4048: 4046: 4033:legation to the 4013:Rosika Schwimmer 4002: 3996: 3992: 3986: 3984: 3956: 3950: 3948: 3935: 3929: 3922: 3916: 3902: 3896: 3883: 3877: 3859: 3853: 3846: 3840: 3819: 3813: 3802: 3776:Marxist Feminism 3750: 3745: 3744: 3736: 3731: 3730: 3729: 3561:with Sash (1944) 3505: 3436: 3412:women's suffrage 3408:liberal feminism 3404:Marxist feminism 3390:To dear comrade 3315:Stalinist purges 3294:Death and legacy 3289: 3255: 3232:In his memoirs, 3216: 3021:Kronstadt rebels 2996:workers' control 2823:, among others. 2747:Heinrich Herkner 2687: 2680: 2673: 2657: 2656: 2645: 2644: 2643: 2633: 2632: 2631: 2610:Workers' council 2431:Race & Class 1338:Frankfurt School 1305:Neo-Gramscianism 1278:Marxism–Leninism 1260: 1204:Cultural Studies 1161:World revolution 1106:Private property 652:Prison Notebooks 552: 529: 514:higher education 390:Marxist feminism 365:and the fall of 306: 305: 300: 290: 270: 154: 138:Saint Petersburg 123:Personal details 112: 91: 88: 83: 74: 62: 21: 6235: 6234: 6230: 6229: 6228: 6226: 6225: 6224: 6080:Left communists 6010: 6009: 5984:Wayback Machine 5947: 5925: 5912: 5896: 5890: 5869: 5860: 5854: 5833: 5824: 5815: 5806: 5797: 5784: 5774:Radical America 5771: 5768: 5766:Further reading 5741:Wayback Machine 5726: 5713: 5684: 5678: 5663: 5643: 5626: 5609: 5602: 5595: 5588: 5582: 5569: 5566: 5561: 5552: 5548: 5533: 5529: 5528: 5524: 5516: 5512: 5504: 5500: 5490: 5489: 5478: 5465: 5461: 5452: 5450: 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4433: 4416: 4412: 4404: 4397: 4382: 4378: 4368: 4366: 4363:interaffairs.ru 4357: 4356: 4352: 4344: 4340: 4329: 4321:. p. 326. 4312: 4311: 4307: 4294: 4292: 4290: 4265: 4264: 4260: 4256: 4251: 4250: 4240:Lázaro Cárdenas 4237: 4233: 4214: 4210: 4199: 4193: 4189: 4184: 4180: 4166: 4154: 4152:Antonio Moscato 4149: 4145: 4132: 4128: 4107: 4103: 4081: 4077: 4055: 4051: 4040: 4020:Honorary Consul 4003: 3999: 3993: 3989: 3982: 3962:Getzler, Israel 3960: 3957: 3953: 3942: 3936: 3932: 3923: 3919: 3903: 3899: 3884: 3880: 3860: 3856: 3847: 3843: 3828:Narodnaia Volia 3820: 3816: 3803: 3799: 3794: 3748:Politics portal 3746: 3739: 3734:Feminism portal 3732: 3727: 3725: 3722: 3595:The New Review, 3580:Современный мир 3568: 3516: 3506: 3500: 3437: 3431: 3384: 3296: 3290: 3284: 3256: 3246: 3210: 3187: 3088: 3078:, Zinoviev and 2984:Sergei Medvedev 2966:Communist Party 2948: 2887: 2821:Karl Liebknecht 2727: 2691: 2651: 2641: 2639: 2629: 2627: 2615: 2614: 2588:Universal class 2479:Conflict theory 2459: 2451: 2450: 2426:New Left Review 2381: 2373: 2372: 1513: 1503: 1502: 1433: 1423: 1422: 1333:Budapest School 1257: 1256:Common variants 1249: 1248: 1179: 1171: 1170: 1136: 1126: 1125: 1029:Critical theory 989: 979: 978: 959:Surplus product 887: 877: 876: 837: 827: 826: 697:Reading Capital 562: 476: 411: 406: 379:Left Communists 348:First World War 325:Bolshevik party 319:for Welfare in 236: 223: 221: 215: 213: 207: 199: 198:Other political 188:Political party 156: 152: 136: 134: 133: 113: 108: 92: 89: 72: 67: 58: 35: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 6233: 6231: 6223: 6222: 6217: 6212: 6207: 6202: 6197: 6192: 6190:Women Marxists 6187: 6182: 6177: 6172: 6167: 6162: 6157: 6152: 6147: 6142: 6137: 6132: 6127: 6122: 6117: 6112: 6107: 6102: 6100:Old Bolsheviks 6097: 6092: 6087: 6082: 6077: 6072: 6067: 6062: 6057: 6052: 6047: 6042: 6037: 6032: 6027: 6022: 6012: 6011: 6008: 6007: 5994: 5987: 5973: 5958: 5946: 5945:External links 5943: 5942: 5941: 5929: 5923: 5910: 5903: 5894: 5888: 5867: 5858: 5852: 5831: 5822: 5813: 5804: 5795: 5782: 5767: 5764: 5763: 5762: 5748: 5730: 5724: 5711: 5693:(4): 944–970. 5682: 5676: 5661: 5647: 5641: 5624: 5607: 5586: 5580: 5565: 5562: 5560: 5559: 5553:Reproduced at 5546: 5522: 5510: 5498: 5476: 5459: 5433: 5403: 5376:(1): 166–175. 5349: 5299: 5292: 5274: 5267: 5249: 5233: 5210: 5193: 5172: 5159: 5131: 5129:, p. 248. 5119: 5104: 5075: 5066: 5040: 4988: 4979: 4971:Iring Fetscher 4963: 4954: 4932:Fischer, Louis 4903: 4894: 4882: 4873: 4861: 4849: 4823: 4811: 4799: 4797:, p. 163. 4787: 4775: 4773:, p. 182. 4763: 4741: 4726: 4724:, p. 189. 4714: 4702: 4700:, p. 105. 4690: 4688:, p. 177. 4678: 4666: 4654: 4639: 4631:Simkin, John, 4621: 4609: 4597: 4585: 4573: 4553: 4525: 4513: 4498: 4486: 4464: 4452: 4431: 4410: 4395: 4376: 4350: 4338: 4327: 4305: 4288: 4257: 4255: 4252: 4249: 4248: 4231: 4208: 4187: 4178: 4143: 4126: 4110:Iring Fetscher 4101: 4075: 4049: 3997: 3987: 3980: 3951: 3930: 3917: 3897: 3878: 3854: 3841: 3821:Adding to the 3814: 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2453: 2452: 2449: 2448: 2443: 2438: 2433: 2428: 2423: 2421:Monthly Review 2418: 2413: 2408: 2403: 2401:Constellations 2398: 2393: 2388: 2382: 2379: 2378: 2375: 2374: 2371: 2370: 2365: 2360: 2355: 2350: 2345: 2340: 2335: 2330: 2325: 2320: 2315: 2310: 2305: 2300: 2295: 2290: 2285: 2280: 2275: 2270: 2265: 2260: 2255: 2250: 2245: 2240: 2235: 2230: 2225: 2220: 2215: 2210: 2205: 2200: 2195: 2190: 2185: 2180: 2175: 2170: 2165: 2160: 2155: 2150: 2145: 2140: 2135: 2130: 2125: 2120: 2115: 2110: 2105: 2100: 2095: 2090: 2085: 2080: 2075: 2070: 2065: 2060: 2055: 2050: 2045: 2040: 2035: 2030: 2025: 2020: 2015: 2010: 2005: 2000: 1995: 1990: 1985: 1980: 1975: 1970: 1965: 1960: 1955: 1950: 1945: 1940: 1935: 1930: 1925: 1920: 1915: 1910: 1905: 1900: 1895: 1890: 1885: 1880: 1875: 1870: 1865: 1860: 1855: 1850: 1845: 1840: 1835: 1830: 1825: 1820: 1815: 1810: 1805: 1800: 1795: 1790: 1785: 1780: 1775: 1770: 1765: 1760: 1755: 1750: 1745: 1740: 1735: 1730: 1725: 1720: 1715: 1710: 1705: 1700: 1695: 1690: 1685: 1680: 1675: 1670: 1665: 1660: 1655: 1650: 1645: 1640: 1635: 1630: 1625: 1620: 1615: 1610: 1605: 1600: 1595: 1590: 1585: 1580: 1575: 1570: 1565: 1560: 1555: 1550: 1545: 1540: 1535: 1530: 1525: 1520: 1514: 1509: 1508: 1505: 1504: 1501: 1500: 1495: 1490: 1485: 1480: 1475: 1470: 1465: 1460: 1455: 1450: 1445: 1440: 1434: 1431:Other variants 1429: 1428: 1425: 1424: 1419: 1418: 1417: 1416: 1411: 1406: 1401: 1396: 1391: 1386: 1381: 1373: 1372: 1368: 1367: 1366: 1365: 1360: 1355: 1350: 1345: 1340: 1335: 1327: 1326: 1320: 1319: 1318: 1317: 1315:Third-worldist 1312: 1307: 1302: 1301: 1300: 1295: 1290: 1285: 1275: 1267: 1266: 1258: 1255: 1254: 1251: 1250: 1247: 1246: 1241: 1236: 1231: 1226: 1224:Historiography 1221: 1216: 1211: 1206: 1201: 1196: 1191: 1186: 1180: 1177: 1176: 1173: 1172: 1169: 1168: 1163: 1158: 1153: 1148: 1143: 1141:Class struggle 1137: 1132: 1131: 1128: 1127: 1124: 1123: 1118: 1113: 1108: 1103: 1098: 1096:Metabolic rift 1093: 1088: 1083: 1078: 1073: 1068: 1063: 1062: 1061: 1056: 1051: 1046: 1036: 1031: 1026: 1021: 1016: 1011: 1006: 1001: 996: 990: 985: 984: 981: 980: 977: 976: 971: 966: 961: 956: 951: 946: 945: 944: 939: 929: 924: 919: 914: 909: 904: 899: 888: 883: 882: 879: 878: 875: 874: 872:Marxist ethics 869: 864: 859: 854: 849: 844: 838: 833: 832: 829: 828: 825: 824: 819: 814: 809: 804: 799: 794: 789: 784: 779: 774: 769: 764: 759: 754: 749: 744: 739: 734: 729: 724: 719: 717:Ways of Seeing 714: 709: 704: 699: 694: 689: 684: 679: 674: 669: 664: 659: 654: 649: 644: 639: 634: 629: 624: 619: 614: 609: 604: 599: 594: 589: 584: 579: 574: 569: 563: 558: 557: 554: 553: 545: 544: 538: 537: 492:St. Petersburg 475: 472: 443:United Kingdom 410: 407: 405: 402: 321:Vladimir Lenin 276: 275: 272: 271: 264: 260: 259: 253: 249: 248: 245: 241: 240: 233: 229: 228: 201: 195: 194: 189: 185: 184: 181: 177: 176: 170: 166: 165: 164:, Soviet Union 155:(aged 79) 149: 145: 144: 142:Russian Empire 131: 129: 125: 124: 120: 119: 116: 115: 105: 104: 98: 97: 94: 93: 84: 76: 75: 69: 68: 65: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 6232: 6221: 6218: 6216: 6213: 6211: 6208: 6206: 6203: 6201: 6198: 6196: 6193: 6191: 6188: 6186: 6183: 6181: 6178: 6176: 6173: 6171: 6168: 6166: 6163: 6161: 6158: 6156: 6153: 6151: 6148: 6146: 6143: 6141: 6138: 6136: 6133: 6131: 6128: 6126: 6123: 6121: 6118: 6116: 6113: 6111: 6108: 6106: 6103: 6101: 6098: 6096: 6093: 6091: 6088: 6086: 6083: 6081: 6078: 6076: 6073: 6071: 6068: 6066: 6063: 6061: 6058: 6056: 6053: 6051: 6048: 6046: 6043: 6041: 6038: 6036: 6033: 6031: 6028: 6026: 6023: 6021: 6018: 6017: 6015: 6006: 6002: 5998: 5995: 5993:Kollontai.net 5992: 5988: 5985: 5981: 5978: 5974: 5971: 5967: 5963: 5959: 5956: 5952: 5949: 5948: 5944: 5940: 5939: 5934: 5930: 5926: 5924:0-86068-013-4 5920: 5916: 5911: 5909: 5904: 5900: 5895: 5891: 5885: 5881: 5877: 5873: 5868: 5864: 5859: 5855: 5853:9780804710732 5849: 5845: 5840: 5839: 5832: 5828: 5823: 5819: 5814: 5810: 5805: 5801: 5796: 5792: 5788: 5783: 5779: 5775: 5770: 5769: 5765: 5761: 5757: 5753: 5749: 5746: 5742: 5738: 5735: 5731: 5727: 5725:0-393-00974-2 5721: 5717: 5712: 5708: 5704: 5700: 5696: 5692: 5688: 5687:Slavic Review 5683: 5679: 5673: 5669: 5668: 5662: 5659: 5656:, volume IV: 5655: 5651: 5648: 5644: 5642:0-253-31209-4 5638: 5633: 5632: 5625: 5621: 5617: 5613: 5608: 5601: 5594: 5593: 5587: 5583: 5577: 5573: 5568: 5567: 5563: 5556: 5550: 5547: 5542: 5538: 5534: 5526: 5523: 5519: 5514: 5511: 5507: 5502: 5499: 5495: 5487: 5485: 5483: 5481: 5477: 5473: 5469: 5463: 5460: 5448: 5444: 5437: 5434: 5422: 5418: 5412: 5410: 5408: 5404: 5399: 5395: 5391: 5387: 5383: 5379: 5375: 5371: 5367: 5360: 5358: 5356: 5354: 5350: 5345: 5341: 5337: 5333: 5329: 5325: 5321: 5317: 5313: 5306: 5304: 5300: 5295: 5293:1-86049-562-1 5289: 5285: 5278: 5275: 5270: 5264: 5260: 5253: 5250: 5246: 5242: 5237: 5234: 5230: 5226: 5223: 5217: 5215: 5211: 5207: 5203: 5197: 5194: 5190: 5189:0-415-90204-5 5186: 5182: 5176: 5173: 5169: 5163: 5160: 5148: 5141: 5135: 5132: 5128: 5123: 5120: 5115: 5108: 5105: 5093: 5089: 5082: 5080: 5076: 5070: 5067: 5054: 5050: 5044: 5041: 5029: 5025: 5021: 5017: 5014:: 1365–1388. 5013: 5009: 5005: 5004: 4999: 4992: 4989: 4983: 4980: 4976: 4972: 4967: 4964: 4958: 4955: 4951: 4947: 4941: 4937: 4933: 4929: 4925: 4921: 4917: 4913: 4907: 4904: 4898: 4895: 4892:, p. 48. 4891: 4886: 4883: 4877: 4874: 4871:, p. 31. 4870: 4865: 4862: 4858: 4853: 4850: 4838: 4834: 4827: 4824: 4820: 4815: 4812: 4808: 4803: 4800: 4796: 4791: 4788: 4784: 4779: 4776: 4772: 4767: 4764: 4760: 4756: 4752: 4751: 4745: 4742: 4738: 4733: 4731: 4727: 4723: 4718: 4715: 4709: 4707: 4703: 4699: 4694: 4691: 4687: 4682: 4679: 4675: 4670: 4667: 4663: 4658: 4655: 4651: 4650: 4646:Clive James, 4643: 4640: 4636: 4635: 4628: 4626: 4622: 4618: 4613: 4610: 4607:, p. 18. 4606: 4601: 4598: 4595:, p. 16. 4594: 4589: 4586: 4583:, p. 15. 4582: 4577: 4574: 4571:, p. 15. 4570: 4564: 4557: 4554: 4550: 4546: 4540: 4538: 4536: 4534: 4532: 4530: 4526: 4523:, p. 14. 4522: 4517: 4514: 4511:, p. 12. 4510: 4505: 4503: 4499: 4496:, p. 11. 4495: 4490: 4487: 4483: 4477: 4476: 4468: 4465: 4461: 4456: 4453: 4449: 4445: 4441: 4435: 4432: 4428: 4424: 4420: 4414: 4411: 4407: 4402: 4400: 4396: 4393: 4391: 4386: 4380: 4377: 4364: 4360: 4354: 4351: 4347: 4342: 4339: 4335: 4330: 4324: 4320: 4316: 4309: 4306: 4302: 4291: 4285: 4281: 4277: 4273: 4269: 4262: 4259: 4253: 4245: 4241: 4235: 4232: 4228: 4224: 4219: 4212: 4209: 4203: 4198: 4191: 4188: 4182: 4179: 4174: 4170: 4164: 4158: 4153: 4150:According to 4147: 4144: 4140: 4136: 4130: 4127: 4123: 4119: 4118:Autobiografia 4115: 4111: 4105: 4102: 4098: 4094: 4090: 4086: 4079: 4076: 4072: 4068: 4064: 4059: 4053: 4050: 4044: 4039: 4036: 4035:United States 4032: 4028: 4025: 4021: 4018: 4014: 4011: 4007: 4001: 3998: 3991: 3988: 3983: 3981:0-521-89442-5 3977: 3973: 3969: 3968: 3963: 3955: 3952: 3946: 3940: 3934: 3931: 3927: 3921: 3918: 3914: 3910: 3909: 3901: 3898: 3894: 3893: 3888: 3882: 3879: 3875: 3871: 3869: 3864: 3863:Autobiography 3858: 3855: 3852:, p. 18. 3851: 3845: 3842: 3838: 3833: 3829: 3824: 3818: 3815: 3811: 3807: 3801: 3798: 3791: 3787: 3784: 3782: 3779: 3777: 3774: 3772: 3769: 3767: 3764: 3762: 3759: 3757: 3754: 3753: 3749: 3743: 3738: 3735: 3724: 3719: 3714: 3710: 3709: 3705: 3702: 3699: 3696: 3693: 3689: 3687: 3683: 3680: 3677: 3674: 3671: 3668: 3665: 3662: 3659: 3656: 3653: 3650: 3647: 3644: 3641: 3638: 3635: 3632: 3629: 3626: 3623: 3622: 3616: 3615: 3611: 3610: 3609: 3608: 3604: 3603: 3599: 3596: 3592: 3589: 3585: 3581: 3577: 3573: 3570: 3569: 3565: 3560: 3557: 3555: 3551: 3548: 3545: 3542: 3539: 3536: 3533: 3532: 3528: 3524: 3520: 3513: 3511: 3504: 3497: 3492: 3489: 3483: 3482: 3475: 3470: 3469: 3462: 3458: 3456: 3452: 3447: 3443: 3435: 3428: 3423: 3421: 3420:working-class 3417: 3413: 3409: 3405: 3397: 3393: 3392:Louise Bryant 3388: 3381: 3379: 3377: 3376: 3372:in the movie 3371: 3367: 3363: 3359: 3355: 3351: 3347: 3346: 3341: 3335: 3333: 3328: 3324: 3320: 3316: 3312: 3308: 3303: 3301: 3293: 3287: 3281: 3274: 3269: 3265: 3263: 3253: 3249: 3243: 3238: 3235: 3230: 3227: 3222: 3220: 3214: 3209: 3205: 3201: 3197: 3192: 3184: 3182: 3180: 3176: 3172: 3168: 3164: 3160: 3156: 3152: 3148: 3144: 3140: 3136: 3135: 3130: 3126: 3121: 3119: 3118:Joseph Stalin 3115: 3109: 3106: 3097: 3092: 3085: 3083: 3081: 3077: 3073: 3069: 3065: 3061: 3057: 3053: 3048: 3046: 3042: 3038: 3034: 3030: 3024: 3022: 3016: 3014: 3009: 3005: 3000: 2997: 2993: 2989: 2985: 2981: 2977: 2973: 2972: 2967: 2962: 2960: 2956: 2947: 2943: 2939: 2935: 2933: 2932:Pavel Dybenko 2929: 2925: 2921: 2917: 2913: 2909: 2908:July uprising 2905: 2901: 2897: 2892: 2884: 2882: 2880: 2875: 2874:United States 2871: 2866: 2861: 2859: 2855: 2851: 2844: 2843:Pavel Dybenko 2839: 2832: 2828: 2824: 2822: 2818: 2814: 2810: 2804: 2802: 2798: 2794: 2790: 2789:Julius Martov 2786: 2782: 2781:Winter Palace 2778: 2777:Bloody Sunday 2774: 2769: 2767: 2762: 2760: 2756: 2755:Beatrice Webb 2752: 2748: 2744: 2738: 2736: 2735:Elena Stasova 2732: 2724: 2722: 2720: 2716: 2711: 2703: 2699: 2688: 2683: 2681: 2676: 2674: 2669: 2668: 2666: 2665: 2660: 2655: 2650: 2648: 2638: 2636: 2626: 2624: 2621: 2620: 2619: 2618: 2611: 2608: 2606: 2603: 2599: 2596: 2595: 2594: 2591: 2589: 2586: 2584: 2581: 2577: 2574: 2572: 2569: 2567: 2566:Revolutionary 2564: 2562: 2559: 2557: 2554: 2552: 2549: 2547: 2546:Authoritarian 2544: 2543: 2542: 2539: 2537: 2534: 2532: 2529: 2525: 2522: 2520: 2517: 2516: 2515: 2512: 2510: 2507: 2505: 2502: 2500: 2497: 2495: 2492: 2490: 2487: 2485: 2482: 2480: 2477: 2475: 2472: 2470: 2467: 2465: 2462: 2461: 2455: 2454: 2447: 2444: 2442: 2439: 2437: 2434: 2432: 2429: 2427: 2424: 2422: 2419: 2417: 2414: 2412: 2409: 2407: 2404: 2402: 2399: 2397: 2394: 2392: 2389: 2387: 2384: 2383: 2377: 2376: 2369: 2366: 2364: 2361: 2359: 2356: 2354: 2351: 2349: 2348:Moufawad-Paul 2346: 2344: 2341: 2339: 2336: 2334: 2331: 2329: 2326: 2324: 2321: 2319: 2316: 2314: 2311: 2309: 2306: 2304: 2301: 2299: 2296: 2294: 2291: 2289: 2286: 2284: 2281: 2279: 2276: 2274: 2271: 2269: 2266: 2264: 2261: 2259: 2256: 2254: 2251: 2249: 2246: 2244: 2241: 2239: 2236: 2234: 2231: 2229: 2226: 2224: 2221: 2219: 2216: 2214: 2211: 2209: 2206: 2204: 2201: 2199: 2196: 2194: 2191: 2189: 2186: 2184: 2181: 2179: 2176: 2174: 2171: 2169: 2166: 2164: 2161: 2159: 2156: 2154: 2151: 2149: 2146: 2144: 2141: 2139: 2136: 2134: 2131: 2129: 2126: 2124: 2121: 2119: 2116: 2114: 2111: 2109: 2106: 2104: 2101: 2099: 2096: 2094: 2091: 2089: 2086: 2084: 2081: 2079: 2076: 2074: 2071: 2069: 2066: 2064: 2061: 2059: 2056: 2054: 2051: 2049: 2046: 2044: 2041: 2039: 2036: 2034: 2031: 2029: 2026: 2024: 2021: 2019: 2016: 2014: 2011: 2009: 2006: 2004: 2001: 1999: 1996: 1994: 1991: 1989: 1986: 1984: 1981: 1979: 1976: 1974: 1971: 1969: 1966: 1964: 1961: 1959: 1956: 1954: 1951: 1949: 1946: 1944: 1941: 1939: 1936: 1934: 1931: 1929: 1926: 1924: 1921: 1919: 1916: 1914: 1911: 1909: 1906: 1904: 1901: 1899: 1896: 1894: 1891: 1889: 1886: 1884: 1881: 1879: 1876: 1874: 1871: 1869: 1866: 1864: 1861: 1859: 1856: 1854: 1851: 1849: 1846: 1844: 1841: 1839: 1836: 1834: 1831: 1829: 1826: 1824: 1821: 1819: 1816: 1814: 1811: 1809: 1806: 1804: 1801: 1799: 1796: 1794: 1791: 1789: 1786: 1784: 1781: 1779: 1776: 1774: 1771: 1769: 1766: 1764: 1761: 1759: 1756: 1754: 1751: 1749: 1746: 1744: 1741: 1739: 1736: 1734: 1731: 1729: 1726: 1724: 1721: 1719: 1716: 1714: 1711: 1709: 1706: 1704: 1701: 1699: 1696: 1694: 1691: 1689: 1686: 1684: 1681: 1679: 1676: 1674: 1671: 1669: 1666: 1664: 1661: 1659: 1656: 1654: 1651: 1649: 1646: 1644: 1641: 1639: 1636: 1634: 1631: 1629: 1626: 1624: 1621: 1619: 1616: 1614: 1611: 1609: 1606: 1604: 1601: 1599: 1596: 1594: 1591: 1589: 1586: 1584: 1581: 1579: 1576: 1574: 1571: 1569: 1566: 1564: 1561: 1559: 1556: 1554: 1551: 1549: 1546: 1544: 1541: 1539: 1536: 1534: 1531: 1529: 1526: 1524: 1521: 1519: 1516: 1515: 1512: 1507: 1506: 1499: 1496: 1494: 1491: 1489: 1486: 1484: 1481: 1479: 1476: 1474: 1471: 1469: 1466: 1464: 1461: 1459: 1458:Eurocommunism 1456: 1454: 1451: 1449: 1446: 1444: 1443:Austromarxism 1441: 1439: 1436: 1435: 1432: 1427: 1426: 1415: 1412: 1410: 1407: 1405: 1402: 1400: 1397: 1395: 1392: 1390: 1389:Communization 1387: 1385: 1382: 1380: 1377: 1376: 1375: 1374: 1369: 1364: 1363:Praxis School 1361: 1359: 1356: 1354: 1351: 1349: 1346: 1344: 1341: 1339: 1336: 1334: 1331: 1330: 1329: 1328: 1325: 1321: 1316: 1313: 1311: 1308: 1306: 1303: 1299: 1296: 1294: 1291: 1289: 1286: 1284: 1281: 1280: 1279: 1276: 1274: 1271: 1270: 1269: 1268: 1265: 1261: 1253: 1252: 1245: 1242: 1240: 1237: 1235: 1232: 1230: 1227: 1225: 1222: 1220: 1217: 1215: 1212: 1210: 1207: 1205: 1202: 1200: 1197: 1195: 1192: 1190: 1187: 1185: 1182: 1181: 1175: 1174: 1167: 1164: 1162: 1159: 1157: 1154: 1152: 1149: 1147: 1144: 1142: 1139: 1138: 1135: 1130: 1129: 1122: 1121:Working class 1119: 1117: 1114: 1112: 1109: 1107: 1104: 1102: 1099: 1097: 1094: 1092: 1089: 1087: 1084: 1082: 1079: 1077: 1074: 1072: 1069: 1067: 1064: 1060: 1057: 1055: 1052: 1050: 1047: 1045: 1042: 1041: 1040: 1037: 1035: 1032: 1030: 1027: 1025: 1022: 1020: 1017: 1015: 1012: 1010: 1007: 1005: 1002: 1000: 997: 995: 992: 991: 988: 983: 982: 975: 972: 970: 967: 965: 962: 960: 957: 955: 952: 950: 947: 943: 940: 938: 935: 934: 933: 930: 928: 925: 923: 920: 918: 915: 913: 910: 908: 905: 903: 902:Crisis theory 900: 897: 893: 890: 889: 886: 881: 880: 873: 870: 868: 865: 863: 860: 858: 855: 853: 850: 848: 845: 843: 840: 839: 836: 831: 830: 823: 820: 818: 815: 813: 810: 808: 805: 803: 800: 798: 795: 793: 790: 788: 785: 783: 780: 778: 775: 773: 770: 768: 765: 763: 760: 758: 755: 753: 750: 748: 745: 743: 740: 738: 735: 733: 730: 728: 725: 723: 720: 718: 715: 713: 710: 708: 705: 703: 700: 698: 695: 693: 690: 688: 685: 683: 680: 678: 675: 673: 670: 668: 665: 663: 660: 658: 655: 653: 650: 648: 645: 643: 640: 638: 635: 633: 630: 628: 625: 623: 620: 618: 615: 613: 610: 608: 605: 603: 600: 598: 595: 593: 590: 588: 585: 583: 580: 578: 575: 573: 570: 568: 565: 564: 561: 556: 555: 551: 547: 546: 543: 539: 535: 531: 530: 526: 521: 517: 515: 511: 507: 500: 495: 493: 489: 482:1888 portrait 480: 473: 471: 468: 466: 462: 458: 453: 448: 444: 441:like that of 440: 436: 432: 428: 424: 420: 416: 408: 403: 401: 398: 393: 391: 387: 382: 380: 376: 372: 368: 364: 360: 357:which ousted 356: 351: 349: 345: 341: 340:Julius Martov 337: 333: 328: 326: 322: 318: 314: 310: 299: 295: 286: 282: 273: 269: 265: 261: 258: 254: 250: 246: 242: 239: 234: 230: 226: 219: 211: 205: 202: 196: 193: 190: 186: 182: 178: 174: 171: 169:Resting place 167: 163: 159: 150: 146: 143: 139: 135:31 March 1872 130: 126: 121: 117: 111: 106: 103: 99: 95: 82: 77: 70: 63: 60: 56: 52: 49: and the 48: 44: 40: 33: 19: 5975:Helen Ward, 5969: 5936: 5914: 5898: 5871: 5862: 5842:. Stanford: 5837: 5826: 5817: 5808: 5799: 5790: 5786: 5777: 5773: 5751: 5744: 5715: 5690: 5686: 5666: 5657: 5653: 5650:Cole, G.D.H. 5630: 5619: 5615: 5600:the original 5591: 5571: 5564:Bibliography 5555:marxists.org 5549: 5541:the original 5536: 5525: 5513: 5501: 5491:(in Russian) 5471: 5462: 5451:, retrieved 5446: 5436: 5424:. Retrieved 5420: 5373: 5369: 5322:(2): 70–74. 5319: 5315: 5283: 5277: 5258: 5252: 5236: 5205: 5202:Marxists.org 5196: 5180: 5175: 5167: 5162: 5150:. Retrieved 5146: 5134: 5122: 5113: 5107: 5095:. Retrieved 5091: 5069: 5057:. Retrieved 5055:. April 2020 5052: 5043: 5031:. Retrieved 5007: 5001: 4991: 4982: 4974: 4966: 4957: 4945: 4939: 4906: 4897: 4885: 4876: 4864: 4852: 4840:. 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Cambridge 3966: 3954: 3944: 3933: 3920: 3907: 3900: 3890: 3881: 3874:Marxists.org 3867: 3862: 3857: 3844: 3839:, p. 9. 3823:Dostoevskian 3817: 3800: 3703: 3697: 3684: 3679:A Great Love 3678: 3672: 3666: 3660: 3654: 3648: 3642: 3636: 3630: 3624: 3612: 3600: 3594: 3587: 3583: 3579: 3576:Modern World 3575: 3527:Soviet Union 3508: 3502: 3494: 3485: 3480: 3477: 3472: 3467: 3464: 3459: 3454: 3439: 3433: 3425: 3401: 3373: 3357: 3343: 3336: 3304: 3297: 3285: 3278: 3261: 3258: 3251: 3247: 3240: 3234:Leon Trotsky 3231: 3223: 3190: 3188: 3167:Hans Thomsen 3132: 3122: 3110: 3101: 3049: 3025: 3017: 3003: 3001: 2999:experience. 2987: 2969: 2963: 2959:Soviet Union 2952: 2946:Clara Zetkin 2910:against the 2903: 2896:April theses 2888: 2862: 2850:Peter Maslov 2847: 2813:Clara Zetkin 2809:Karl Kautsky 2805: 2770: 2763: 2739: 2728: 2707: 2531:Municipalism 2343:Bhattacharya 1572: 1488:Situationist 1463:Instrumental 1116:State theory 1081:Immiseration 1076:Human nature 1066:Exploitation 896:accumulation 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2015 4795:Allen 2008 4783:Allen 2015 4771:Allen 2015 4737:Allen 2015 4686:Allen 2008 4662:Allen 2008 4254:References 4229:, p. 190). 3786:Bolsheviks 3690:New York: 3625:Free Love. 3159:Winter War 3151:Ambassador 3041:Karl Radek 2904:Rabotnitsa 2793:Bolsheviks 2785:Mensheviks 2551:Democratic 2416:Mediations 2028:Przeworski 1968:Poulantzas 1818:Sivanandan 1773:Bettelheim 1673:Horkheimer 1668:Mariátegui 1643:Pashukanis 1568:Liebknecht 1498:Wertkritik 1438:Analytical 1298:Trotskyism 1273:Autonomist 1264:Structural 1244:Philosophy 1184:Aesthetics 969:Value-form 937:Capitalist 842:Alienation 835:Philosophy 592:Grundrisse 474:Early life 344:Mensheviks 304:Домонтович 252:Occupation 218:Bolsheviks 210:Mensheviks 43:patronymic 5707:158044855 5398:158374267 5390:2159-8282 5344:159006262 5336:1936-0924 5097:27 August 5073:Morrison. 5033:9 January 4652:, p. 359. 4567:Cited in 4480:Cited in 4031:Bulgarian 3756:Zhenotdel 3442:free love 3416:bourgeois 3396:Petrograd 3375:Ninotchka 3348:based on 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3614:Red Love 3499:—  3451:Komsomol 3430:—  3378:(1939). 3345:Red Love 3283:—  3245:—  3200:February 3191:de facto 3064:Zinoviev 3045:Valkyrie 2791:and the 2715:populist 2524:Old Left 2519:New Left 2386:Antipode 2380:Journals 2283:Heinrich 2258:Roediger 2253:Douzinas 2243:Hennessy 2198:Holloway 2113:Hartsock 2103:Eagleton 2088:Federici 2063:Bannerji 2038:Therborn 2018:Rancière 2013:Easthope 1993:Anderson 1988:Altvater 1888:O'Connor 1883:Mészáros 1878:Guattari 1833:Thompson 1823:Miliband 1803:Williams 1788:Hobsbawm 1763:Emmanuel 1743:Beauvoir 1708:Lefebvre 1653:Benjamin 1618:Bukharin 1598:Zinoviev 1593:Grossman 1578:Bogdanov 1553:Connolly 1533:Lafargue 1478:Orthodox 1448:Centrist 1399:Leninism 1394:Feminist 1343:Humanist 1324:Hegelian 852:Ideology 534:a series 532:Part of 409:Ancestry 359:the tsar 257:diplomat 244:Children 175:, Moscow 6003:of the 5999:in the 5787:Preuves 5114:My Life 5059:15 June 5028:1861311 4952:(2017). 4938:(ed.). 4475:Oktyabr 4440:op.cit. 4223:Molotov 4165:, see: 4089:article 4085:Preuves 4047:(1921). 3870:Kautsky 3694:, 1984. 3529:in 1972 3125:attaché 3037:Trotsky 2982:and by 2719:Marxist 2623:Outline 2576:Utopian 2353:Srnicek 2338:Toscano 2333:Seymour 2288:Prashad 2238:Sankara 2233:Berardi 2218:Hampton 2193:Burawoy 2163:Panitch 2158:Haraway 2148:Cleaver 2133:Brenner 2098:Balibar 2053:Postone 2043:Losurdo 1973:Vattimo 1943:Gonzalo 1938:Jameson 1928:Parenti 1868:Liebman 1863:Guevara 1753:Nkrumah 1748:Sombart 1723:Padmore 1693:Kalecki 1688:Marcuse 1648:Bordiga 1633:Gramsci 1588:Trotsky 1548:Du Bois 1538:Kautsky 1414:Western 1293:Titoism 1178:Aspects 1134:History 1054:Radical 892:Capital 597:Capital 542:Marxism 452:Finnish 447:Tsarist 435:liberal 427:Tarnovo 285:Russian 216:RSDLP ( 208:RSDLP ( 183:Russian 5921:  5886:  5850:  5758:  5722:  5705:  5674:  5639:  5578:  5537:ria.ru 5396:  5388:  5342:  5334:  5290:  5265:  5187:  5026:  4759:Pravda 4448:Zhenya 4425:  4325:  4286:  4069:  3978:  3972:et al. 3865:, the 3549:(1945) 3543:(1942) 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Index

Aleksandra Kollontai
Kollontai (disambiguation)
Eastern Slavic naming customs
patronymic
family name

People's Commissar of State Protection of the RSFSR
Saint Petersburg
Russian Empire
Moscow
Russian SFSR
Novodevichy Cemetery
VKP(b)
RSDLP
Mensheviks
Bolsheviks
RKP(b)
Pavel Efimovich Dybenko
diplomat

Russian
née
O.S.
Marxist theoretician
People's Commissar
Vladimir Lenin
Bolshevik party
Imperial Russian Army
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
Julius Martov

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