Rabotnitsa (Russian: Работница; English: The Woman Worker) is a women's journal, published in the Soviet Union and Russia and one of the oldest Russian magazines for women and families. Founded in 1914, and first published on Women's Day, it is the first socialist women's journal,[1] and the most politically left of the women's periodicals.[2] While the journal's beginnings are attributed to Lenin and several women who were close to him, he did not contribute to the first seven issues.[3]
It was re-organized in May 1917 as a Bolshevik journal administered by the Zhenotdel, the Women's Section of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, becoming their central publication. Later that year, its editors organized the First Conference of Working Women of the Petrograd Region (chaired by Klavdiya Nikolayeva, one of the journal's editors), promoting the Bolshevik cause in the elections to the Constituent Assembly.[4] From the start of the Russian Revolution of 1917, Rabotnitsa served as the official women's publication under the Communist Party in Russia.[5]
^Choi Chatterjee (2002). Celebrating women: gender, festival culture, and Bolshevik ideology, 1910–1939. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-8229-4178-1. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
^Cite error: The named reference Noonan2001 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Cite error: The named reference Elwood2002 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^"Rabotnitsa". University of Toronto. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
^Catterall, Miriam; Maclaran, Pauline; Stevens, Lorna (2000). Marketing and feminism: current issues and research. Psychology Press. pp. 165, 167, 175–. ISBN 978-0-415-21973-0. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
Rabotnitsa (Russian: Работница; English: The Woman Worker) is a women's journal, published in the Soviet Union and Russia and one of the oldest Russian...
attempt to propagandise the 'new Soviet woman' through the magazines Rabotnitsa and Krest'yanka from the 1920s to the end of the Stalin era. Balancing...
deemphasize both. In the early 1920s, Party-sanctioned magazines like Rabotnitsa ("The Working Woman") and Krest’yanka ("The Peasant Woman") offered discourse...
a printing press, where her activism began. She wrote for the journal Rabotnitsa (Working Woman). She was arrested for the first time in 1908, at the age...
depicted taking subservient roles to the men, such as being his assistant ("rabotnitsa"). These women blacksmith figures were less common, but significant, since...
under Vladimir Lenin's order, "Rabotnitsa" started to serve as the official publication of Zhenotdel. Following "Rabotnitsa," publications like Kommunistka...
the movement reappeared when the Bolshevik's founded a journal called Rabotnitsa, which detailed issues regarding women. The journal was edited by Inessa...
itself under the Stalinist mandate. Feminism portal Soviet Union portal Rabotnitsa Soviet woman (magazine) Iskra Pravda Elizabeth A. Wood (2000). The Baba...
Lenin and Nadezhda Krupskaya in Galicia. She also began work editing Rabotnitsa. Krupskaya, with admiration, noted that exhausted as Armand was, she threw...
as a speaker, leaflet writer and worker on the Bolshevik women's paper Rabotnitsa". Following the July uprising against the Provisional Government, she...
featured in numerous top Soviet mass media publications - such as Ogoniok, Rabotnitsa, Pravda, Izvestia, Sovetskaya Kultura, Smena, and Ukraina - as well as...
board, of the newspaper, Pravda. She later joined the editorial staff of Rabotnitsa. She met Arkadi A. Samoilov in 1906 and they married in 1913. They had...
targeting women. It was an imitation of the Soviet women's magazine Rabotnitsa in terms of its content, layout, and strict communist ideology as late...
support the war effort was published in issue No.19-20 of the magazine Rabotnitsa in 1942. Ganiyeva's exact sniper tally is disputed: her award sheet for...
Basel. She was also involved in the Bolshevik press, including Pravda and Rabotnitsa. In January 1913 she was arrested during an attempt to deliver a message...
During this time, she also functioned as the executive secretary of Rabotnitsa, a periodical dedicated to the issues of women workers. It is estimated...
ADAPEI AM, France, and others. "Hasten to do good!". – The magazine "Rabotnitsa", № 3 of 1989 – https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1uofP2NAJxpZ21ZaC1VWmkzN0k/view...
Na Smenu! from 14 to 26 January 1939, in Oktyabr (issues 5–6), and in Rabotnitsa magazine (issues 18–19). In 1944 the story was translated from Russian...
Pankhurst continuing as editor until 1924. The Russian women's journal Rabotnitsa (The Woman Worker) was published on the fifth annual International Women's...