Imagen del autor

Alexandra Kollontai (1872–1952)

Autor de Love of Worker Bees

65+ Obras 762 Miembros 6 Reseñas 2 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, George Grantham Bain Collection (REPRODUCTION NUMBER: LC-DIG-ggbain-25077)

Obras de Alexandra Kollontai

Love of Worker Bees (1923) 172 copias
Selected Writings (1663) 82 copias
A Great Love (1929) 71 copias
Arbetaroppositionen (1976) 24 copias
Communism and the Family (1971) 18 copias
Red Love (1923) — Autor — 14 copias
Den nya moralen (1979) 8 copias
Revolusjon og kjærlighet (1977) 8 copias
The Soviet Woman (2020) 6 copias
Kvinnan och familjen (1976) 6 copias
Vassilissa 5 copias
La Bolchevique enamorada (2008) 5 copias
Mujer y lucha de clases (2016) 5 copias
Largo all'eros alato (2008) 3 copias
El amor y la mujer nueva (2017) 2 copias
Første etappe 2 copias
Ek Mahan Prem 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

The Essential Feminist Reader (2007) — Contribuidor — 318 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Kollontaj, Aleksandra
Nombre legal
Kollontaj, Aleksandra Michajlovna
Domontovic, Aleksandra Michajlovna
Fecha de nacimiento
1872-03-31
Fecha de fallecimiento
1952-03-09
Lugar de sepultura
Novodevichy Cemetery, Moscow, Russia
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Rusland
País (para mapa)
Russia
Lugar de nacimiento
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
Lugar de fallecimiento
Moscow, Russia, USSR
Lugares de residencia
Sint Petersburg, Rusland
Moskou, Rusland
Educación
University of Zurich
Ocupaciones
political activist
revolutionary
writer
diplomat
feminist
autobiographer
Organizaciones
Bolshevik Party
Premios y honores
Order of Lenin (1933)
Biografía breve
Alexandra Mikhailovna Kollontai, née Domontovich, was born in St. Petersburg, Russia to a wealthy family. Her father was a general in the Tsar’s army, and her mother was the daughter of a prosperous Finnish businessman. Alexandra's mother had fled an arranged marriage to be with her father, and this background influenced Alexandra's own views on marriage and relationships. Alexandra was a good student in childhood, with an interest in history, and learned to speak French, English, Finnish, and German. She wanted to attend university, but her mother refused permission; instead, Alexandra was to be allowed to become a school teacher before debuting in society to find a husband, as was the custom of girls of her class. At age 21, against her parents' wishes, she married her cousin Vladimir Kollontai, an engineering student of modest means, with whom she had a son. But she felt trapped by domestic life and seethed with anger at social injustice. She abandoned her husband and son and went to the University of Zurich to study political economy. Upon returning to Russia in 1899, she joined the illegal Social Democratic Labor Party to organize female workers. In 1908, about to be arrested for her political writing, she fled for Europe and the USA, where she wrote, organized, lectured, and spent time in prison for her anti-war activism. At the onset of World War I, outraged by the hypocrisy of Europe’s newly-hawkish Social Democrats, she returned to Russia in time to meet the sealed train that brought Lenin to the Finland Station. For her support of the Bolshevik Revolution, she was named Commissar for Social Welfare in the first Soviet government, a position she held for five months, before resigning in protest against the treaty of Brest-Litovsk. Kollantai continued in the government, working for women's liberation and sexual freedom, but was frequently critical of Communist Party leaders. She became a political outcast and was sent into the diplomatic corps, one of the first women in the service, with posts in Norway, Mexico, and Sweden; eventually she attained the rank of Ambassador. She wrote many publications expressing her views on the struggles of women, including short stories and the novels Love of Worker Bees and
A Great Love. Her Autobiography of a Sexually Emancipated Communist Woman was published in English in 1971.

Miembros

Reseñas

Vassilissa es una joven bolchevique de gran rectitud moral que se enamora perdidamente de Volodya, un atractivo anarquista. Inician una bonita pero también tormentosa relación en la que el amor se entremezcla continuamente con el compromiso por su pueblo. Al igual que Alexandra Kollontai, la protagonista de esta novela se entrega totalmente a la causa revolucionaria rusa y a la lucha feminista.
 
Denunciada
Natt90 | Dec 13, 2022 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
65
También por
2
Miembros
762
Popularidad
#33,391
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
95
Idiomas
13
Favorito
2

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