ABSTRACT
Until recent times, incidents of mass unrest in the USSR were shrouded in official secrecy. Now this pioneering work by historian Vladimir A. Kozlov has opened up these hidden chapters of Soviet history. It details an astonishing variety of widespread mass protest in the post-Stalin period, including workers' strikes, urban riots, ethnic and religious confrontations, and soldiers' insurrections. Kozlov has drawn on exhaustive research in police, procuracy, KGB, and Party archives to recreate the violent major uprisings described in this volume. He traces the historical context and the sequence of events leading up to each mass protest, explores the demographic and psychological dynamics of the situation, and examines the actions and reactions of the authorities. This painstaking analysis reveals that many rebellions were not so much anti-communist as essentially conservative in nature, directed to the defense of local norms being disturbed by particular instances of injustice or by the rash of Krushchev-era reforms. This insight makes the book valuable not only for what it tells us about postwar Soviet history, but also for what it suggests about contemporary Russian society as well as popular protests in general.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |18 pages
Introduction
part |2 pages
Part I. Social Conflict in the USSR After the Death of Stalin, 1953-1960
chapter |28 pages
Unrest in the Military: Soldiers' Riots and Disorders
chapter |15 pages
Violent Ethnic Conflicts in the Virgin Lands
chapter |8 pages
Orthodoxy in Revolt: Uprisings Among Religious Believers
part |2 pages
Part II. The Crisis of "Liberal Communism": "Anti-Khrushchev" Urban Uprisings and Disorders, 1961-1964
chapter |8 pages
The Early 1960s: Symptoms of a Social-Political Crisis
chapter |12 pages
Krasnodar, RSFSR, January 15-16, 1961
chapter |9 pages
Biisk—1961 or The Uprising on Market Day, June 25, 1961
chapter |27 pages
The Phenomenon of Novocherkassk: Part One
chapter |37 pages
The Phenomenon of Novocherkassk: Part Two
chapter |15 pages
Rear-Guard Battles of the Late Khrushchev Era
part |2 pages
Part III. "Unruly" Stagnation: Mass Uprisings from the Late 1960s to the Mid-1980s