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"During the Soviet-era, feminism was classified as a bourgeois ideology, hence counterrevolutionary and anti-Soviet. Civil society and feminism were virtually nonexistent in the Soviet times".Why are you lying? In the USSR there was no ban on feminism, in the USSR varieties of feminism were banned, for example, bourgeois, in return for which socialist feminism was promoted in the USSR, famous representatives of which were such well-known feminists as Alexandra Mikhailovna Kollontai, Inessa Armand, Clara Zetkin and Rosa Luxembourg and many others , the USSR was generally one of the advanced countries in the women's issue, for example, the Soviet project for resolving the "women's issue" in the early stages implied the political and economic mobilization of women in the interests of the state. The theoretical basis of this policy was Marxist feminism; Alexandra Kollontai played the most important role in the development of this ideology and its application in practice. Women's departments and the delegate movement, designed to ensure the labor emancipation of women and their involvement in production and communist construction, became important instruments of the policy of women's emancipation. The policy pursued meant ensuring the economic independence of a woman from a man - the head of a patriarchal family, increasing literacy, weakening family and marriage ties, and sexual liberalization. Divorce and paternity procedures were simplified, and abortion was legalized. The Soviet constitution guaranteed equal pay for equal work for women and men, a policy of social security and support for working mothers was carried out - in particular, structures of nurseries and kindergartens were created, time and place were provided for breastfeeding right at the enterprise, mothers were guaranteed benefits
Цйфыву (
talk) 15:50, 20 November 2022 (UTC)reply
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Feminism, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
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"During the Soviet-era, feminism was classified as a bourgeois ideology, hence counterrevolutionary and anti-Soviet. Civil society and feminism were virtually nonexistent in the Soviet times".Why are you lying? In the USSR there was no ban on feminism, in the USSR varieties of feminism were banned, for example, bourgeois, in return for which socialist feminism was promoted in the USSR, famous representatives of which were such well-known feminists as Alexandra Mikhailovna Kollontai, Inessa Armand, Clara Zetkin and Rosa Luxembourg and many others , the USSR was generally one of the advanced countries in the women's issue, for example, the Soviet project for resolving the "women's issue" in the early stages implied the political and economic mobilization of women in the interests of the state. The theoretical basis of this policy was Marxist feminism; Alexandra Kollontai played the most important role in the development of this ideology and its application in practice. Women's departments and the delegate movement, designed to ensure the labor emancipation of women and their involvement in production and communist construction, became important instruments of the policy of women's emancipation. The policy pursued meant ensuring the economic independence of a woman from a man - the head of a patriarchal family, increasing literacy, weakening family and marriage ties, and sexual liberalization. Divorce and paternity procedures were simplified, and abortion was legalized. The Soviet constitution guaranteed equal pay for equal work for women and men, a policy of social security and support for working mothers was carried out - in particular, structures of nurseries and kindergartens were created, time and place were provided for breastfeeding right at the enterprise, mothers were guaranteed benefits
Цйфыву (
talk) 15:50, 20 November 2022 (UTC)reply