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Plebeian Modernity Social Practices Illegality And The Urban Poor In Russia 19061916 Ilya Gerasimov

  • SKU: BELL-6999054
Plebeian Modernity Social Practices Illegality And The Urban Poor In Russia 19061916 Ilya Gerasimov
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Plebeian Modernity Social Practices Illegality And The Urban Poor In Russia 19061916 Ilya Gerasimov instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Rochester Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.84 MB
Pages: 302
Author: Ilya Gerasimov
ISBN: 9781580469050, 1580469051
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

Plebeian Modernity Social Practices Illegality And The Urban Poor In Russia 19061916 Ilya Gerasimov by Ilya Gerasimov 9781580469050, 1580469051 instant download after payment.

Covering the interrevolutionary decade of 1906-16 in imperial Russia, the book tells the story of the "silent majority" of urban inhabitants in four major cities: Vilna (today Vilnius, Lithuania), Odessa (in today's Ukraine), Kazan, and Nizhny Novgorod. Representatives of underprivileged social groups made up some ninety percent of city populations during this period, yet produced hardly one percent of the surviving written sources. In fact, these people, many of them migrants from the countryside, existed in a nondiscursive environment: they usually did not read newspapers, rarely authored written documents, and had little exposure to public discourse. They often did not even speak a common language. Our understanding of the experiences of this population has until recently been based largely on interpretations by educated observers (journalists, legal experts, scholars). whose testimonies reflected the cultural stereotypes of the time. This book bypasses such mediation, arguing that we can come to know the authentic voices of urban commoners by reading their social practices as a nonverbal language. Toward that end, author Ilya Gerasimov closely examines newspaper criminal chronicles, police reports, and anonymous extortion letters, reconstructing typical social practices among this segment of Russian society. The resulting picture represents the distinctive phenomenon of a "plebeian modernity," one that helped shape the outlook of early Soviet society.

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