No More Heroines?: Russia, Women and the MarketRoutledge, 4. kol 2005. - Broj stranica: 240 With the collapse of Soviet rule and the emergence of independent Russia, the image of Russian women in the Western imagination has changed dramatically. The robust tractor drivers and athletes have been replaced by glamorous but vulnerable beauty queens or the dishevelled and downcast women trading goods on the streets. The authors of this work take a closer look at what lies behind the above images and how Russian women are coping with a very different sort of life. The main focus is on the effect of unemployment on Russian women and how they are coping with it. Based on case studies and personal interviews carried out in the Moscow region in 1993-94, No More Heroines? will provide both specialist and non-specialist alike with access to the thinking of women and their organisations in Russia today. |
Sadržaj
No More Heroines?
| 1 |
Part I The Impact of Change
| 11 |
Part II Responding to Change
| 74 |
Transitions Victims or Heroines of Survival? | 193 |
Background to the CaseStudies
| 201 |
Notes | 205 |
Bibliography | 211 |
221 | |
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
No More Heroines?: Russia, Women and the Market Susan Bridger,Kathryn Pinnick,Rebecca Kay Ograničeni pregled - 1996 |
No More Heroines?: Russia, Women and the Market Sue Bridger,Rebecca Kay,Kathryn Pinnick Ograničeni pregled - 2005 |
No More Heroines?: Russia, Women and the Market Susan Bridger,Kathryn Pinnick,Rebecca Kay Pregled nije dostupan - 1996 |
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
activities appeared areas attitudes beauty contests become benefit cent Centre’s Communist course dacha Dubna economic economists employers Employment Centre engineers enterprises Evseeva example feel female feminist firms Gender Studies glamour modelling glasnost Guildia homeworking Image Centre income increasingly industry inevitably involved issue labour market Litt living standards look major men’s minimum wage Missiya models months Moscow Moscow Centre Moskovskii komsomolets mothers numbers of women offer official particularly pensioners perestroika planned economy political pornography potential problems produce programme prostitution question Rabotnitsa Razumnova redundant reforms response result retraining roubles Russian women Rzhanitsina sector selling sex industry sexual harassment simply situation skills small businesses social Soviet women summer of 1993 survival there’s trade union transition unemployed USSR western woman women entrepreneurs women we interviewed women’s organisations workers workforce young women zhenshchina