947.0842 SOC Social Dimensions of Soviet Industrialization / Ed. W. G. Rosenberg, L. H. Siegelbaum. - Bloomington ; Indianapolis : Indiana University Press, 1993. - xix, 296 p. - Bibliography : p. 285 - 289. - ISBN 0-253-20772-X. - Текст : непосредственный. Contributors : p. 290 - 291. Index : p. 292 - 296
Siegelbaum, Lewis. Conceptualizing the Command Economy : Western Historians on Soviet Industrialization / L. H. Siegelbaum, R. G. Suny Fitzpatrick, Sheila. The Great Departure : Rural-Urban Migration in the Soviet Union, 1929 - 1933 / S. Fitzpatrick Merl, Stephan. Social Mobility in the Countryside / S. Merl Kotkin, Stephen. Peopling Magnitostroi : the Politics of Demography / S. Kotkin Davies, R. W. The Management of Soviet Industry, 1928 - 1941 / R. W. Davies Rowney, Don. The Scope, Authority, and Personnel of the New Industrial Commissariats in Historical Context / D. K. Rowney Kuromiya, Hiroaki. The Commander and the Rank and File : Managing the Soviet Coal-Mining Industry, 1928 - 1933 / H. Kuromiya Siegelbaum, Lewis. Masters of the Shop Floor : Foremen and Soviet Industrialization / L. H. Siegelbaum Shearer, David. Factories within Factories : Changes in the Structure of Work and Management in Soviet Machine-Building Factories, 1926 - 1934 / D. Shearer Solomon, Peter. Criminal Justice and the Industrial Front / P. Solomon Clark, Katerina. Engineers of Human Souls in an Age of Industrializa tion : Changing Cultural Models, 1929 - 1941 / K. Clark Eley, Geoff. Soviet Industrialization from a European Perspective / G. Eley Lewin, Moshe. On Soviet Industrialization / M. Lewin
The essays assembled here focus on the social and cultural dimensions of Soviet industrialization during the late 1920s and 1930s and their impact on the process of Soviet industrial transformation. Among the themes studied are urbanization, social mobility, questions of social identity and of the cultural construction of the industrialization drive, and the social dimensions of work, management relations, and the organization of industrial production. Careful attention is paid to the comparative dimensions of Soviet industrialization from the European perspective and the phenomenon of industrialization as a totalizing process. Concentrating on the "great change" as a multidimensional social and cultural process, Social Dimensions of Soviet Industrialization provides an invaluable complement to existing literature on Soviet Russia's economic growth. It is essential reading for scholars and students seeking a comprehensive understanding of the Soviet 1930s. William G. Rosenberg is Professor of History at the University of Michigan. He is author of Liberals in the Russian Revolution and coauthor (with Diane P. Koenker) of Strikes and Revolution in Russia, 1917. Lewis H. Siegelbaum is Professor of Modern Russian History at Michigan State University. He is author of Soviet State and Society between Revolutions, 1918 - 1929 and Stakhanovism and the Politics of Productivity in the USSR