This ground-breaking work documents Russian efforts to
appropriate Western solutions to the problem of economic
backwardness since the time of Catherine the Great. Entangled then
as now with issues of cultural borrowing, educated Russians
searched for Western nations, ideas, and social groups that
embodied universal economic truths applicable to their own country.
Esther Kingston-Mann describes Russian Westernization--which
emphasized German as well as Anglo-U.S. economics--while she raises
important questions about core values of Western culture and how
cultural values and priorities are determined.
This is the first historical account of the significant role
played by Russian social scientists in nineteenth-century Western
economic and social thought. In an era of rapid Western colonial
expansion, the Russian quest for the "right" Western economic model
became more urgent: Was Russia condemned to the fate of India if it
did not become an England? In the 1900s, Russian liberal economists
emphasized cultural difference and historical context, while
Marxists and prerevolutionary government reformers declared that
inexorable economic laws doomed peasants and their "medieval"
communities. On the eve of 1917, both the tsarist regime and its
leading critics agreed that Russia must choose between
Western-style progress or "feudal" stagnation. And when peasants
and communes survived until Stalin's time, he mercilessly destroyed
them in the name of progress. Today Russia's painful modernizing
traditions shape the policies of contemporary reformers, who seem
as certain as their predecessors that economic progress requires
wholesale obliteration of the past.
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