Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stal... A source page for quotes linked to Douglas Northrop. 0 quotes
“When agents of the Turkmen secret police came up short in arrests of counterrevolutionaries in 1937-38, they filled their quota by going to the Ashgabat marketplace and rounding up all men who wore beards, on theory that they were likely to be mullahs.” UssrStalinArrestsTurkmenistanGreat Terror Author:Douglas Northrop
“In Lenin's view, such changes were positive: nations, as products of capitalist economic relations, fitted into classic Marxist stage theory of development. Even Stalin, who differed on the implications for Soviet policy, agreed that nations were an inescapable phase through which all humans communities must pass. Ultimately, they (like, capitalism) would be superseded, but for precapitalist societies national development and nationalist movements were treated as progressive. Lenin drew a further distinction between great-power nationalism, which oppressed others, and small-power nationalism, which formed in response o it. In places - such as Russia - that had been responsible for national and colonial oppression of others, nationalism was to be combated without mercy and torn out by the roots. Among groups that had been victims of national or colonial oppression, by contrast-such as in the tsarist imperial periphery, where Russian power had created deep economic, political, and social resentment-the Leninist approach was to build socialism while encouraging indigenous development and national differentiation.” NationalismUssrStalinLeninCentral AsiaUzbekistanNational Question Book:Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia Source: Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia
“Even under Stalin, Soviet state power, acting through law and the courts, confronted serious limits in its efforts to govern, much less transform, its colonial Central Asian periphery.” UssrStalinCentral Asia Book:Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia Source: Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia
“Still other rumors held that the ultimate aim of Bolshevik policy, seen in the combination of unveiling and collectivization, was to have all women held in common. In the kolkhoz, peasants ware warned, men and women slept together under giant blanket, and wives became common property.” UssrStalinCentral AsiaCollectvizationHujum Book:Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia Source: Veiled Empire: Gender and Power in Stalinist Central Asia