Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 65, No. 9, 01 Nov 2013 is now available on Taylor & Francis Online.
Special Issue: Victims and Villains in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia
This new issue contains the following articles:
Articles
Introduction: Reflections on Villains, Victims and Violence
Steve Smith
Pages: 1691-1699
Knowing Russia's Convicts: The Other in Narratives of Imprisonment and Exile of the Late Imperial Era
Sarah J. Young
Pages: 1700-1715
From Villains to Victims: Experiencing Illness in Siberian Exile
Sarah Badcock
Pages: 1716-1736
Villain or Victim? The Faith-Based Sobriety of the Factory Worker Petr Terekhovich in Soviet Russia, 1925–1929
Page Herrlinger
Pages: 1737-1754
Russia's Red Revolutionary and White Terror, 1917–1921: A Provincial Perspective
Liudmila G. Novikova
Pages: 1755-1770
Defining the ‘Political’ Crime: Revolutionary Tribunals in Early Soviet Russia
Matthew Rendle
Pages: 1771-1788
Controlling Revolution: Understandings of Violence through the Rural Soviet Courts, 1917–1923
Aaron B. Retish
Pages: 1789-1806
Cleansing NEP Russia: State Violence Against the Russian Orthodox Church in 1922
James Ryan
Pages: 1807-1826
The Process of Collectivisation Violence
Tracy McDonald
Pages: 1827-1847
Miscellany
Afterword
Gerald D. Surh
Pages: 1848-1851
List of Contributors
Pages: 1852-1854
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