What you must do this
week
What you should do this
week
What you can do this
week
- Read a contemporary explanation of
Russia's lack of any substantial industry
- Read chapter 25 and chapter 26 from Mary Platt Parmele (1843-1911) A Short History of Russia
(1907, 4th edition). These are short chapters, and this is optional reading.
- In H. W. Williams, Russia of the Russians (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1915),
consider reading any of these chapters: The Bureaucracy and the Constitution,
The Press,
Church and People,
Peasants and Proprietors,
Trade and Industry and
In the Chief City [St. Petersburg]. Williams
was a newspaper correspondent in Russia who married a
politically-active Russian liberal woman. His book, though almost a
century old, is well-written and very much reflective of pre-World War
I sentiments. He made some very interesting observations about Russia in his book.
Extra Credit Options
- For 50 points maximum extra credit, watch Dersu Uzala (1975). What
does the movie tell us about earlier Russian society, in a one-page paper?
- For 50 points maximum extra credit, watch Fiddler on the Roof (1971) and explain in a one-page paper how Jews did /did not get along with Russians at the turn of the century?
- For 50 points maximum extra credit, read
Edward Judge, Easter in Kishinev: Anatomy of a Pogrom (1992) and
write a one-page paper, "What were the government's motives in instigating the pogroms?".
- For 50 points maximum extra credit, read
Theodore H. von Laue, Sergei Witte and the Industrialization of Russia (1963) and
write a one-page paper explaining the "Witte system" of economic modernization.
- For 50 points maximum extra credit, read
Robert Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra (1967) and
write a one-page paper explaining what went wrong in Russia under tsar Nicholas II.
- For 25 points maximum extra credit, read
the Letter of the Revolutionary Committee to Alexander III,
written after the
assassination of Alexander II, and write a long paragraph that answers the
question, Do you think that this was a wise move, sending this letter, on
the part of the Russian revolutionaries? (Check the tsar's
Manifesto of April 29, 1881)
- For 25 points maximum extra credit, read some excerpts from
Konstantin Pobedonostsev, Reflections of a Russian Statesman, and
write a long paragraph that answers the question, What were some of the main tenets of
Pobedonostsev's political philosophy?
- For 25 points maximum extra credit, read a
newspaper account of
the Kishinev pogrom and write a paragraph explaining the impact of the pogrom
on Kishinev.
- For 25 points maximum extra credit, read the
Franco-Russian Alliance Military Convention (1992),
and write a long paragraph that answers the question, How did this convention fit into the
pre-1914 diplomatic scene?
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