
Between 1906 and the outbreak of World War I, Moscow was the locale of great uncertainty and experimentation. Moscow's liberal leaders sought social and political stability for their city following the violence of the 1905 revolution by offering attractive programs in education, employment, housing and other areas to Moscow's unruly lower classes. They were countered in their efforts, however, by central authorities of the Old Regime, who feared the political effects of these programs and stressed social rigidity. Liberal City, Conservative State examines the resulting clash between the city and the state as it brought to the surface and exacerbated the deep tensions plaguing Russia by the eve of World War I. It focuses on the roots of this dispute, juxtaposing the Old Regime's rural background and orientation with the urban concerns of Moscow's liberals, and sees the state's essential failure in its inability to come to terms with the realities of urban life and growth. Providing new perspectives and insights into Russian liberalism, the scope and urgency of urban problems, and the importance of tsarist ideology in conditioning development after 1905, Moscow's story sheds light on the unsolved dilemmas and contradictions that pushed Russia inexorably toward revolution.
This work investigates the fundamental conflict between Moscow's reformist municipal leadership and the rigid central government of the Russian Old Regime during the pre-World War I era. Robert William Thurston, a specialist in Russian history, utilizes archival records and municipal data to analyze how the state's inability to adapt to rapid urbanization exacerbated existing social tensions. The book argues that the clash between local liberal experimentation and tsarist conservatism served as a critical catalyst for the instability that preceded the 1917 revolution.
What You Will Find
Historians and scholars of the late Imperial period frequently cite this text for its detailed examination of the administrative failures of the tsarist state. Experts highlight the book as a foundational resource for understanding the specific urban-rural tensions that defined the final years of the Russian Empire.
Page Count:
286
Publication Date:
1987-09-17
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195043316
ISBN-13:
9780195043310
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