Description

Book Synopsis
The Petrograd Workers in the Russian Revolution is a study of the Russian Revolutions of 1917 and of the first months of Soviet power as viewed and experienced 'from below'

Table of Contents

List of Tables and Maps
Glossary

Introduction

1 Types of Political Culture in the Industrial Working-Class of Petrograd
 The Skilled Workers
 Unskilled Workers
 The ‘Worker Aristocracy’
 The Generational Factor

2 The Social Composition of the Industrial Working Class of Petrograd and its Districts
 The Social Composition of Petrograd’s Districts
 The Vyborg District
 Petergof and Narva Districts
 Vasilevskii ostrov
 Petrograd District
 Moskovskaya zastava
 Nevskii-Obukhovskii District
 Kolomna District
 Second City District
 First City District
 Rozhdestvenskii District
 Okhta and Porokhovskii Districts

3 The Honeymoon Period – From the February to the April Days
 The Labour Movement during the War
 The February Revolution – The Birth of Dual Power
 Census Society
 Dual Power in Light of Attitudes before the Revolution
 Why Dual Power?

4 The February Revolution in the Factories
 The Eight-Hour Day
 Wages
 The Press Campaign against ‘Worker Egoism’
 Worker-Management Relations: ‘Democratisation of Factory Life’
 Purge of the Factory Administrations
 The Factory Committees

5 From the April to the July Days
 The April Days
 The First Coalition Government
 The Break with Census Society
 Underlying Causes of the Shift to Soviet Power

6 The Struggle for Power in the Factories in April–June

7 The July Days
 The Workers and the Menshevik-SR Soviet Majority
 The July Days
 Reaction Unleashed

8 Rethinking the Revolution: Revolutionary Democracy or Proletarian Dictatorship?
 Census Society on the Offensive
 Final Rejection of ‘Conciliationism’
 The Question of ‘Revolutionary Democracy’

9 From the Kornilov Uprising to the Eve of October
 The Kornilov Uprising
 The Democratic Conference
 Setting Course for Soviet Power

10 Class Struggle in the Factories – September–October
 The Factory Committees under Attack
 The Struggle for Production – Workers’ Control Checked
 From Workers’ Control and towards Workers’ Management
 Factory Committees under Pressure ‘from Below’
 The Struggle for Production and the Question of State Power
 Quiet on the Wage Front

11 On the Eve

12 The October Revolution and the End of ‘Revolutionary Democracy’
 Workers’ Attitudes towards the Insurrection
 The Question of a ‘Homogeneous Socialist Government’
 Unity from Below

13 The Constituent Assembly and the Emergence of a Worker Opposition
 The Elections
 Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly
 The Chernorabochie and the Upsurge of Anarchist Influence
 The Lines Harden

14 The October Revolution in the Factories
 ‘Active’ or ‘Passive’ Control?
 Towards Nationalisation
 Management in Nationalised Enterprises

15 Summon Up Every Last Ounce of Strength or Accept Defeat!
 Dispersal of Petrograd’s Working Class
 The ‘Obscene Peace’
 Rise and Failure of the Opposition

Conclusion

Bibliography
Index

The Petrograd Workers The Russian Revolution:

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    A Paperback / softback by David Mandel

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      View other formats and editions of The Petrograd Workers The Russian Revolution: by David Mandel

      Publisher: Haymarket Books
      Publication Date: 04/12/2018
      ISBN13: 9781608460069, 978-1608460069
      ISBN10: 1608460061

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Petrograd Workers in the Russian Revolution is a study of the Russian Revolutions of 1917 and of the first months of Soviet power as viewed and experienced 'from below'

      Table of Contents

      List of Tables and Maps
      Glossary

      Introduction

      1 Types of Political Culture in the Industrial Working-Class of Petrograd
       The Skilled Workers
       Unskilled Workers
       The ‘Worker Aristocracy’
       The Generational Factor

      2 The Social Composition of the Industrial Working Class of Petrograd and its Districts
       The Social Composition of Petrograd’s Districts
       The Vyborg District
       Petergof and Narva Districts
       Vasilevskii ostrov
       Petrograd District
       Moskovskaya zastava
       Nevskii-Obukhovskii District
       Kolomna District
       Second City District
       First City District
       Rozhdestvenskii District
       Okhta and Porokhovskii Districts

      3 The Honeymoon Period – From the February to the April Days
       The Labour Movement during the War
       The February Revolution – The Birth of Dual Power
       Census Society
       Dual Power in Light of Attitudes before the Revolution
       Why Dual Power?

      4 The February Revolution in the Factories
       The Eight-Hour Day
       Wages
       The Press Campaign against ‘Worker Egoism’
       Worker-Management Relations: ‘Democratisation of Factory Life’
       Purge of the Factory Administrations
       The Factory Committees

      5 From the April to the July Days
       The April Days
       The First Coalition Government
       The Break with Census Society
       Underlying Causes of the Shift to Soviet Power

      6 The Struggle for Power in the Factories in April–June

      7 The July Days
       The Workers and the Menshevik-SR Soviet Majority
       The July Days
       Reaction Unleashed

      8 Rethinking the Revolution: Revolutionary Democracy or Proletarian Dictatorship?
       Census Society on the Offensive
       Final Rejection of ‘Conciliationism’
       The Question of ‘Revolutionary Democracy’

      9 From the Kornilov Uprising to the Eve of October
       The Kornilov Uprising
       The Democratic Conference
       Setting Course for Soviet Power

      10 Class Struggle in the Factories – September–October
       The Factory Committees under Attack
       The Struggle for Production – Workers’ Control Checked
       From Workers’ Control and towards Workers’ Management
       Factory Committees under Pressure ‘from Below’
       The Struggle for Production and the Question of State Power
       Quiet on the Wage Front

      11 On the Eve

      12 The October Revolution and the End of ‘Revolutionary Democracy’
       Workers’ Attitudes towards the Insurrection
       The Question of a ‘Homogeneous Socialist Government’
       Unity from Below

      13 The Constituent Assembly and the Emergence of a Worker Opposition
       The Elections
       Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly
       The Chernorabochie and the Upsurge of Anarchist Influence
       The Lines Harden

      14 The October Revolution in the Factories
       ‘Active’ or ‘Passive’ Control?
       Towards Nationalisation
       Management in Nationalised Enterprises

      15 Summon Up Every Last Ounce of Strength or Accept Defeat!
       Dispersal of Petrograd’s Working Class
       The ‘Obscene Peace’
       Rise and Failure of the Opposition

      Conclusion

      Bibliography
      Index

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