Map of the Siberian Krai - List of Documents - List of Tables and Charts - Preface - List of Abbreviations - Introduction - Capturing the Peasantry - Mobilising Social Influence - The Search for a New Method - The Ural-Siberian Method - Volynki: The Russian Jacquerie - A Prologue of Repression - Stalin's Final Solution - Barshchina and Maroderstvo - The Great U-Turn - Conclusion - Notes - Bibliography
Stalinism in a Russian Province reexamines the agrarian policy pillars of Stalin's 'revolution from above' initiated in 1929-30, and is the first major study of its kind since the opening of Soviet archives. Through a pioneering application of the theoretical approaches of moral and political economy to Stalin's peasant policy, Hughes reevaluates the causes and processes involved in the great political, economic and social changes in the Soviet countryside. Rather than a bipolarized conflict between state and peasant, he profiles the socially variegated response of different peasant groups to collectivization and dekulakization and argues that it was as much a process involving social conflict between peasants.