Regina Kazyulina is a program research associate at the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Salem State University.
Description
Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations, Acronyms, and Terms A Note on Transliteration, Place-Names, and Terms Introduction 1. Soviet Women Between the Wars: A Story of Contradictions 2. Comrades or Spies: Women in the Red Army 3. Scouts or Assassins: Women in the Partisans 4. The Diary of a Komsomolka: Fraternization and the View from Below 5. "Socially Dangerous" Women and Retribution After Liberation Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
"An insightful and original contribution that combines a nuanced reading of Soviet attitudes toward women with the experiences of women under wartime occupation. Kazyulina impressively sets aside old moral frameworks of 'collaboration' or 'fraternization' and shows how complex ideas around gender, citizenship, wartime participation, and loyalty shaped Soviet opinions of women." - Nicole Eaton, author of German Blood, Slavic Soil: How Nazi Koenigsberg Became Soviet Kaliningrad