A Social History of Soviet Trade

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2004-02-02
Publisher(s): Princeton Univ Pr
List Price: $75.00

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Summary

In this sweeping study, Julie Hessler traces the invention and evolution of socialist trade, the progressive constriction of private trade, and the development of consumer habits from the 1917 revolution to Stalin's death in 1953. The book places trade and consumption in the context of debilitating economic crises. Although Soviet leaders, and above all, Stalin, identified socialism with the modernization of retailing and the elimination of most private transactions, these goals conflicted with the economic dynamics that produced shortages and with the government's bureaucratic, repressive, and socially discriminatory political culture. A Social History of Soviet Tradeexplores the relationship of trade--official and unofficial--to the cyclical pattern of crisis and normalization that resulted from these tensions. It also provides a singularly detailed look at private shops during the years of the New Economic Policy, and at the remnants of private trade, mostly concentrated at the outdoor bazaars, in subsequent years. Drawing on newly opened archives in Moscow and several provinces, this richly documented work offers a new perspective on the social, economic, and political history of the formative decades of the USSR.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix
List of Tables xi
Preface xiii
Introduction 1(18)
Two Modes of Soviet Socialism
4(5)
Buyers, Sellers, and the Social History of Trade
9(10)
Crisis: Revolution 19(116)
CHAPTER ONE Trade and Consumption in Revolutionary Russia
19(32)
Russian Retailing and Its Unraveling
20(7)
Effects of the Anti-trade Policy
27(11)
The Crisis Mode of Consumption
38(10)
Conclusion
48(3)
CHAPTER TWO The Invention of Socialism
51(50)
The Emergence of a Socialist Distribution Network, 1918-1921
53(8)
Rationing, "Commodity Exchange," and Price Controls
61(18)
The Antibureaucratic Backlash and Socialist Economic Culture
79(8)
Public-Sector Shops in the Transition to the NEP
87(10)
Conclusion
97(4)
CHAPTER THREE Shopkeepers and the State
101(34)
Poverty, Capital, and the Commercial Revival
103(10)
The Logic of Utilization and the Regulatory Context
113(6)
Shopkeepers' Stories: The NEP from Below
119(11)
Conclusion
130(5)
Crisis: Restructuring 135(116)
CHAPTER FOUR War Communism Redux
135(62)
The NEP from Above: Trade Policy in the Shadow of the Goods Famine
137(17)
Bureaucratism Ascendant: The Effects of Food Shortage on the Distribution System
154(19)
Corporatism in the Service of the Plan
173(11)
Crisis, Consumption, and the Market
184(9)
Conclusion
193(4)
CHAPTER FIVE Toward a New Model
197(54)
Socialist Modernization: "Cultured Soviet Trade"
198(17)
Bureaucratism Restrained
215(7)
Stalinism and the Consumer, I: Urban Attitudes and Trends
222(8)
Stalinism and the Consumer; II: The Peasant Challenge to Cultured Trade
230(13)
Conclusion
243(8)
Crisis: War
CHAPTER SIX The Persistent Private Sector
251(45)
Stalin-era Bazaars
252(21)
Travel, Bagging, and the Survivalist Consensus
273(6)
The Revitalization of the Private Sector
279(10)
Private Trade as a Social Formation: Continuity and Change
289(4)
Conclusion
293(3)
CHAPTER SEVEN
Postwar Normalization and Its Limits
296(2)
From Wartime "Abnormalities" to the Paradox of Growth
298(12)
Cadres Policy in Postwar Trade
310(6)
Postwar "Cultured Trade": A Balance Sheet
316(9)
Conclusion
325(4)
Conclusion 329(8)
Bibliography 337(18)
Index 355

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