“Contents” in “Mutiny amid Repression: Russian Soldiers in the Revolution of 1905–1906”
Contents
I. Officers and Men in the Russian Army
The Tsarist Army’s Peasant Economy
The Moral Economy: Exploitation, Distance, Incomprehension
II. Enemies Domestic: Russia Moves toward Revolution
A Brief Socio-Military History of Nineteenth-Century Russia
The Russo-Japanese War and the Rebellion of Polite Society
III. Failing to Contain Revolution: January-October 1905
The Social and Psychological Contours of Revolution in Russia
The Potemkin and the Revolutionaries: Mutiny Misunderstood
October: Did the Army Fail the Regime?
V. December 1905: Mutineers Save the Regime
Punitive Expeditions on the Periphery
Mutineers against Revolution: The Response to Insurrection
Collapse of the Soldiers’ Revolution: Perceptions of Authority
VI. Preparations for the Second Round
Organizing for Military Revolution
Bidding for the Soldiers’ Loyalty
VII. “These Words Pleased Us Very Much”: Soldiers and Politics
Mutinies Deliberate and Political
VIII. July 1906: The Revolution That Might Have Been
Reining in Revolutionary Soldiers
The Duma Dissolved, Revolutionaries Divided
Revolutionary Theory versus the Psychology of Revolution
Conclusion: Russian Society Viewed through Russian Mutiny
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