Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

This is very much a book worth reading. It sheds interesting new light on sectarian practices in the countryside, and in the process forces us to revise the ways in which we think about the most basic aspects of rural life in imperial Russia.

* American Historical Review *

An analysis of a previously understudied phenomenon, the book constitutes a significant contribution to the study of Russian peasant, religious, and matrimonial history.

* New Books Network *

Drawing mainly on tax census and parish records, John Bushnell has produced an impressive study of marriage practices among Old Believer peasants in several districts in Vladimir, Kostroma, and Nizhnii Novgorod provinces between the early eighteenth and the mid-nineteenth centuries.

* The Russian Review *

Bushnell's study makes for remarkably interesting and engaging reading

* Slavic Review *

Bushnell is to be greatly commended for broadening the discussion on rural life in Russia.

* Journal of Modern History *

This archival study makes a very interesting and important discovery: many peasant women in the Volga region did not marry during the 18th and 19th centuries—at least until the emancipation of serfs when this study breaks off. . . . The data on marriage aversion that Bushnell has collected in this study are extremely valuable. . . . And Bushnell's conlcuding observation that this phenomenon was not limited to Old Believer settlements in the Volga region makes further study of peasant marriage avoidance all the more important.

-- Georg P. Michels * Recensio *

Table of Contents

Introduction: What is the Opposite of Eureka?
1. The Moral Economy of Russian Serf Marriage, 1580s-1750s: Serf Marriage Unregulated
2. Nobles Discover Peasant Women's Marriage Aversion
3. The Outer Limits of Female Marriage Aversion: Kuplia Parish in the 18th Century
4. Kuplia Parish, 1830-1850: Separation, Collapse, Resumption of Marriage
5. Spasovites: the Covenant of Despair
6. Baki: Resistance to Marriage on a Forest Frontier
7. Steksovo and Sergei Mikhailovich Golitsyn: Marriage Aversion in a Context of Prosperity
Inconclusion
Bibliography
Index

Russian Peasant Women Who Refused to Marry

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 23 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by John Bushnell

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    View other formats and editions of Russian Peasant Women Who Refused to Marry by John Bushnell

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 09/10/2017
    ISBN13: 9780253029652, 978-0253029652
    ISBN10: 0253029651

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review

    This is very much a book worth reading. It sheds interesting new light on sectarian practices in the countryside, and in the process forces us to revise the ways in which we think about the most basic aspects of rural life in imperial Russia.

    * American Historical Review *

    An analysis of a previously understudied phenomenon, the book constitutes a significant contribution to the study of Russian peasant, religious, and matrimonial history.

    * New Books Network *

    Drawing mainly on tax census and parish records, John Bushnell has produced an impressive study of marriage practices among Old Believer peasants in several districts in Vladimir, Kostroma, and Nizhnii Novgorod provinces between the early eighteenth and the mid-nineteenth centuries.

    * The Russian Review *

    Bushnell's study makes for remarkably interesting and engaging reading

    * Slavic Review *

    Bushnell is to be greatly commended for broadening the discussion on rural life in Russia.

    * Journal of Modern History *

    This archival study makes a very interesting and important discovery: many peasant women in the Volga region did not marry during the 18th and 19th centuries—at least until the emancipation of serfs when this study breaks off. . . . The data on marriage aversion that Bushnell has collected in this study are extremely valuable. . . . And Bushnell's conlcuding observation that this phenomenon was not limited to Old Believer settlements in the Volga region makes further study of peasant marriage avoidance all the more important.

    -- Georg P. Michels * Recensio *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction: What is the Opposite of Eureka?
    1. The Moral Economy of Russian Serf Marriage, 1580s-1750s: Serf Marriage Unregulated
    2. Nobles Discover Peasant Women's Marriage Aversion
    3. The Outer Limits of Female Marriage Aversion: Kuplia Parish in the 18th Century
    4. Kuplia Parish, 1830-1850: Separation, Collapse, Resumption of Marriage
    5. Spasovites: the Covenant of Despair
    6. Baki: Resistance to Marriage on a Forest Frontier
    7. Steksovo and Sergei Mikhailovich Golitsyn: Marriage Aversion in a Context of Prosperity
    Inconclusion
    Bibliography
    Index

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