Description
[Geifman] argues effectively that those who practiced individual acts of violence against tsarist officials and the population in general had a much more destructive effect on the imperial regime than has generally been acknowledged in the historical literature. -- James W. Hules, "Terrorism and Political Violence"
About the Author
Anna Geifman is Assistant Professor of History at Boston University.
Reviews
"Professor Geifman ... dissects with surgical precision the couple of decades that preceded the Bolshevik seizure of power, a time when a beleaguered tsarist regime groped desperately, and failed to find, some means of defending itself."--Virginia Quarterly Review "This book makes gripping reading... Geifman's detailed account makes it clear that in fact the wave of terrorism broke out more or less spontaneously, and amounted more to a universal breakdown of law and order than to a 'movement.'"--Edward Ross Dickinson, New England Slavonic Journal
Book Information
ISBN 9780691025490
Author Anna Geifman
Format Paperback
Page Count 388
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publisher Princeton University Press
Weight(grams) 567g