TY - JOUR ID - discovery10043447 UR - https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2011.0020 N1 - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions. JF - Journal of Social History PB - GEORGE MASON UNIV SN - 0022-4529 N2 - In 1937, at the height of the Soviet terror, a Communist youth league activist and wife of an official in the Soviet Far East wrote to a central newspaper to invite young women to volunteer to join her to help build socialism on the easternmost frontier of the Soviet Union. In the next three years, over 300,000 women volunteered, and about 25,000 were chosen to lend their skills and labor to the construction of farms, schools, administration, and industry of the Far East. They received the name ?Khetagurovites,? after the woman who issued the original call, Valentina Khetagurova. This deeply researched and exquisitely argued book uses the phenomenon of the Khetagurovites to explore a number of key issues in the history of the Soviet Union, and it makes major contributions to our understanding of state-building, empire, gender, and sexuality in the context of the Soviet experiment. Above all, the book successfully punctures arguments about a ?great retreat? to a pre-revolutionary domesticity in the 1930s, and instead offers a compelling picture of women who enthusiastically seized the opportunity to test their mettle in difficult conditions and to contribute to the common effort of the construction of socialism. SP - 960 AV - public Y1 - 2011/03/01/ TI - Stalinism on the Frontier of Empire: Women and State Formation in the Soviet Far East. By Elena Shulman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. xiv plus 260 pp. $79.00.) VL - 44 A1 - Koenker, DP KW - Arts & Humanities KW - History KW - Stalinism KW - The Soviet Union KW - Communistic regime KW - Khetagurovites KW - Socialism KW - Human rights EP - 962 IS - 3 ER -