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Informationen zum Autor Christine D. Worobec is Board of Trustees Professor and Distinguished Research Professor at Northern Illinois University. Klappentext Sweeping across more than two centuries, this compelling book introduces readers to some of the major themes in Imperial Russia. In a set of engaging essays, the contributors present richly human stories of individual and group experiences, as well as of key events in Russian history. We see the effects of reforms; the consequences of an economy and society built on serfdom; as well as the development of a civil society, the "woman question," urbanization, secularization, and modernity. As this book vividly shows, individuals, groups, and events raised out of obscurity remind us of the messiness of everyday life; of people's dreams, frustrations, and transformations; as well as of their sense of self and the community around them. Inhaltsverzeichnis IntroductionChapter 1: Fashion and the Rise of Consumer Capitalism in RussiaChapter 2: How One Runaway Peasant Challenged the Authority of the Russian State: The Case Against Maria SemenovaChapter 3: Life on the River: The Education of a Merchant YouthChapter 4: The Good Society of Russian Enlightenment TheaterChapter 5: The 1827 Peasant Uprising at BernovoChapter 6: Reframing Public and Private Space in Mid-Nineteenth Century Russia: The Triumvirate of Anna Filosofova, Nadezhda Stasova, and Mariia TrubnikovaChapter 7: Happy Birthday, Siberia! Reform and Public Opinion in Russia's "Colony," 1881-1882Chapter 8: Life in the Big City: Migrants Cope with "Daily Events"Chapter 9: Freedom and its Limitations: A Peasant Wife Seeks to Escape her Abusive HusbandChapter 10: "She Done Him In": Marital Breakdown in a Jewish FamilyChapter 11: Serving the Household, Asserting the Self: Urban Domestic Servant Activism, 1900-1917Chapter 12: Plebeian Poets in Fin de Siècle Russia: Stories of the Self