A Little Corner of Freedom: Russian Nature Protection from Stalin to GorbachevWhile researching Russia's historical efforts to protect nature, Douglas Weiner unearthed unexpected findings: a trail of documents that raised fundamental questions about the Soviet political system. These surprising documents attested to the unlikely survival of a critical-minded, scientist-led movement through the Stalin years and beyond. It appeared that, within scientific societies, alternative visions of land use, resrouce exploitation, habitat protection, and development were sustained and even publicly advocated. In sharp contrast to known Soviet practices, these scientific societies prided themselves on their traditions of free elections, foreign contacts, and a pre-revolutionary heritage. Weiner portrays nature protection activists not as do-or-die resisters to the system, nor as inoffensive do-gooders. Rather, they took advantage of an unpoliced realm of speech and activity and of the patronage by middle-level Soviet officials to struggle for a softer path to development. In the process, they defended independent social and professional identities in the face of a system that sought to impose official models of behavior, ethics, and identity for all. Written in a lively style, this absorbing story tells for the first time how organized participation in nature protection provided an arena for affirming and perpetuating self-generated social identities in the USSR and preserving a counterculture whose legacy survives today. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 77 筆
第 8 頁
Patterns of literary participation in the nature protection cause support these conjectures . ... in environmental causes are associated with the " Village Prose " school ( pochvenniki , derevenshchiki ) and trace their genealogy back ...
Patterns of literary participation in the nature protection cause support these conjectures . ... in environmental causes are associated with the " Village Prose " school ( pochvenniki , derevenshchiki ) and trace their genealogy back ...
第 13 頁
... protection cause and the parallel tension between scientific public opinion and those few citizen activists for whom " the public good " as they construed it outweighed the interests of science . Fridman , who emphasized that nature ...
... protection cause and the parallel tension between scientific public opinion and those few citizen activists for whom " the public good " as they construed it outweighed the interests of science . Fridman , who emphasized that nature ...
第 16 頁
... of the whole managing - directing apparatus , which is its main cause , certainly is not in the material interests either of individual bureaucrats or of their collectivity — in fact it only enhances the competition between them .
... of the whole managing - directing apparatus , which is its main cause , certainly is not in the material interests either of individual bureaucrats or of their collectivity — in fact it only enhances the competition between them .
第 18 頁
Nesmeianov , it appears , was personally committed to the cause of nature protection . At the opposite end of the spectrum , the leaders of the Komsomol saw patronage of the druzhiny as a means of burnishing the image of the Komsomol as ...
Nesmeianov , it appears , was personally committed to the cause of nature protection . At the opposite end of the spectrum , the leaders of the Komsomol saw patronage of the druzhiny as a means of burnishing the image of the Komsomol as ...
第 27 頁
... exclusively framed in scientific terms to provide legitimacy for their cause . More important , they almost certainly believed their own contentions . Like American Progressives such as Gifford Pinchot , the Russian field biologists ...
... exclusively framed in scientific terms to provide legitimacy for their cause . More important , they almost certainly believed their own contentions . Like American Progressives such as Gifford Pinchot , the Russian field biologists ...
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內容
23 | |
36 | |
63 | |
Zapovedniki in Peril 19481950 | 83 |
Liquidation The Second Phase 1950 | 104 |
The Deluge 1951 | 117 |
In the Throes of Crisis VOOP in Stalins Last Years | 137 |
Death and Purgatory | 161 |
Student Movements Catalysts for a New Activism | 312 |
Three Men in a Boat VOOP in the Early 1960s | 340 |
Storm over Baikal | 355 |
Science Doesnt Stand Still | 374 |
Environmental Struggles in the Era of Stagnation | 402 |
Environmental Activism under Gorbachëv | 429 |
Conclusion | 441 |
GLOSSARY OF TERMS | 449 |
VOOP after Stalin Survival and Decay | 182 |
Resurrection | 201 |
A Time to Build | 240 |
A Time to Meet | 260 |
More Trouble in Paradise Crises of the Zapovedniki in the Khrushchëv Era | 288 |
NOTES | 451 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 509 |
INDEX | 529 |
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常見字詞
Academy Academy of Sciences activists activity Agriculture already Archives asked August authorities Baikal began branch bureaucrats called cause Central commission Committee conference Congress conservation continued Council of Ministers created criticism cultural decree defend deputy director early ecological economic environmental especially existing field figure final forest forestry hand head human Ibid important Institute interests issue land late later leaders leadership letter listy Main Administration Makarov Malinovskii March meeting Ministry MOIP Moscow movement nature protection noted official organization Party plants political position present president Presidium problems proposed published question regime represented reserves responsibility RSFSR RSFSR Council Russian scientific scientific public opinion scientists sent served social Society Society's Soviet territories tion transformation TsGA f turned Union University USSR VOOP zapovedniki
熱門章節
第 291 頁 - I recall the first days when the conflict between the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia began artificially to be blown up. Once, when I came from Kiev to Moscow, I was invited to visit Stalin who, pointing to the copy of a letter lately sent to Tito, asked me, 'Have you read this?' Not waiting for my reply he answered, 'I will shake my little finger — and there will be no more Tito. He will fall.
第 371 頁 - Collegium of the USSR Council of Ministers' State Committee for Science and Technology, and the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Sciences.
第 291 頁 - ... But this did not happen to Tito. No matter how much or how little Stalin shook, not only his little finger but everything else that he could shake, Tito did not fall. Why? The reason was that, in this case of disagreement with the Yugoslav comrades, Tito had behind him a state and a people who had gone through a severe school of fighting for liberty and independence, a people which gave support to its leaders.
第 291 頁 - ... these mistakes and shortcomings were magnified in a monstrous manner by Stalin, which resulted in a break of relations with a friendly country. I recall the first days when the conflict between the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia began artificially to be blown up. Once, when I came from Kiev to Moscow, I was invited to visit Stalin who, pointing to the copy of a letter lately sent to Tito, asked, "Have you read this?
第 375 頁 - Ecological and conservation thought at the turn of the century was nearly all in what might be called closed systems of one kind or another. In all of them some kind of balance or near balance was to be achieved. The geologists had their peneplain; the...
第 375 頁 - ... probably there is no consistent trend towards balance. Rather, in the present state of our knowledge and ability to rationalize, we should think in terms of massive uncertainty, flexibility and adjustability (Raup, 1964, p.
第 251 頁 - Representatives were sent by 35 organizations including the USSR Academy of Sciences and the Academies of the union republics, the USSR Ministry of Geology, geophysical trusts and universities.