WEIGHT: 67 kg
Breast: 3
1 HOUR:30$
NIGHT: +90$
Sex services: Fisting anal, Spanking (giving), Strap On, Face Sitting, Role Play & Fantasy
In small type at top of this dual poster is the caption: The roles of women changed dramatically over the course of history in Soviet Russia under different leaders and economic and physical conditions. Pre-Revolution Russia was a very backwards country that was far behind in industrialization and politics. Most other European countries were experimenting with constitutions and democracy yet Russia still had serfdom and a strong nobility.
The industrial class rose up multiple times finally during World War I they won and Lenin took power and created Soviet communism, this liberated women and gave them opportunities to pursue careers as doctors and engineers along with many other professions.
Along with new career opportunities came new laws. In legislature was created to try to weaken marriage and the family to create a unified society focused on the country not the family. The ability to perform marriages was taken away from the church and given solely to the state. With this set of laws also came the right for either the man or woman in a married couple to pursue divorce and win. To feminist Alexandra Kollontai this was great as she saw no future in family structure in Soviet Russia.
Women were still expected to perform most domestic duties and have a job as men saw it as below them to do housework or go grocery shopping. The role of soviet women in society and in other areas was varied and depended on how conditions were in many aspects. These sources in this section cover most aspects of the topic in general and the subtopics are too intermixed to be feasibly divisible.
Most studies and books in this section are comprehensive views of life for women in Soviet Russia in general. Most sources are this way but focus on one topic in general and how the other areas relate to it. University of California Press, Youth in Revolutionary Russia. Indiana University Press, Cornell University Press, Cambridge University Press, Accessed August 4, Soviet girls, collective farmers of a village somewhere in Russia, who joined Guerillas, are pictured on Sept.