Feminists Despite Themselves: Women in Ukranian Community Life, 1884-1939 - Book Review,
by Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak

Book Description Feminists Despite Themselves is the first history of the women's movement in Ukraine. The book explains how Ukrainian women, constrained by national and traditional issues, began to develop self-help organizations in their rural communities. It analyzes a vast range of material, encompassing Ukrainian women in the Russian and Austrian empires; the national liberation struggle; the interwar period; international feminism; and Ukrainian women in the Soviet Union. In this study, based upon primary archival materials in the United States, Canada, Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union, the author suggests that the Ukrainian women's movement was similar to the self-help women's movements characteristic of emergent colonial countries since 1945. It highlights an important dimension of East European and Soviet history and makes a significant contribution to women's studies.
About the Author Dr. Martha Bohachevsky-Chomiak formerly Professor of Jistory at Manhattanville College and Johns Hopkins University, is the director of the Fulbright Program in Ukraine. She is the author of The Spring of a Nation: Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia in 1848 (1967) and S.N. Trubetskoi: An Intellectual among the Intelligentsia in Pre-Revolutionaty Russia (1976). She is also a vice-president of the National Council of Women of the United States.
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