The Russian Bulletin, 1863-1917: A Liberal Voice in Tsarist Russia

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Peter Lang, 2000 - 462 Seiten
This book details the career of the «professors' newspaper», The Russian Bulletin, which served as a spokesman of Russian liberalism for over fifty years. It defended the legacy of Alexander II's Great Reforms, jury courts, and the zemstvo, and called for the rule of law and, eventually, a constitution and Duma for Russia. It combined this liberal position with a defense of the peasant commune and its egalitarianism and a critical attitude toward factories, business, and the free market. After 1905 the newspaper's views evolved; it slowly began to reconsider its egalitarian liberal populist views and its sympathy toward socialists. Before the fall of Tsarism, it accepted the novelty of individual farming and the benefits of industry and foreign investments.

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Inhalt

Russian Bulletin 18631873
7
Russian Bulletin 18731881
33
The World of Newspapers 18651881
67
Urheberrecht

15 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.

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The Author: Daniel Balmuth is Emeritus Professor of History at Skidmore College. A graduate of City College of New York, he received his M.A. and his Ph.D. in Russian history from Cornell University. He has written a number of articles and book reviews for professional journals and is the author of Censorship in Russia, 1865-1905.

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