Voluntary Associations in Tsarist Russia

Science, Patriotism, and Civil Society

Joseph Bradley

PDF
ca. 98,48

Harvard University Press img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Naturwissenschaften allgemein

Beschreibung

On the eve of World War I, Russia, not known as a nation of joiners, had thousands of voluntary associations. Joseph Bradley examines the crucial role of voluntary associations in the development of civil society in Russia from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century.Russians populated a growing public sphere with societies based on the model of the European enlightenment. Owing to the mission of such learned associations as the Free Economic Society, the Moscow Agricultural Society, and the Russian Geographical Society, civil society became inextricably linked to patriotism and the dissemination of scientific knowledge. Although civil society and the autocratic state are often described as bitter rivals, cooperation in the project of national prestige and prosperity was more often the rule. However, an increasing public assertiveness challenged autocratic authority, and associations became a focal point of a contradictory political culture: they fostered a state-society partnership but at the same time were a critical element in the effort to emancipate society from autocracy and arbitrary officialdom.

Weitere Titel von diesem Autor
Weitere Titel in dieser Kategorie
Cover Astrobiology
Andrew May
Cover Living Matter
Alexander Levine
Cover Untitled
Christian Davenport
Cover The Merlin
Frank Rennie
Cover No Island Too Far
Michael Brooke
Cover NMR in Plants and Soils
Sabina Haber-Pohlmeier
Cover The Game of Species
Julián Simón López-Villalta
Cover SIFT-MS
Vaughan S Langford

Kundenbewertungen