[1]
Applebaum, A. 2004. Gulag: a history of the Soviet camps. Penguin.
[2]
Bacon, E. and University of Birmingham. Centre for Russian and East European Studies 1994. The Gulag at war: Stalin’s forced labour system in the light of the archives. Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham.
[3]
Barenberg, A. 2014. Gulag town, company town: forced labor and its legacy in Vorkuta. Yale University Press.
[4]
Bonnell, Victoria E. 1993. The Peasant Woman in Stalinist Political Art of the 1930s. American Historical ReviewThe American Historical Review. 98, 1 (1993), 55–82.
[5]
Bonnell, Victoria E. 1991. The representation of women in early Soviet political art. The Russian ReviewThe Russian Review. 50, 3 (1991).
[6]
Boobbyer, P. 2000. The Stalin era. Routledge.
[7]
Buckley, M. 1989. Women and ideology in the Soviet Union. University of Michigan Press.
[8]
Buckley, Mary 1996. The untold story of ‘Obshchestvennitsa’ in the 1930s. Europe-Asia StudiesEurope-Asia Studies. 48, 4 (1996).
[9]
Clements, B.E. et al. 1991. Russia’s women: accommodation, resistance, transformation. University of California Press.
[10]
Critchlow, D.T. and Critchlow, A. 2002. Enemies of the state: personal stories from the Gulag. Ivan R. Dee.
[11]
Daniels, R.V. and Daniels, R.V. 2001. A Documentary History of Communism in Russia: From Lenin to Gorbachev. University of Vermont Press.
[12]
David-Fox, M. 2016. The Soviet Gulag: Evidence, Interpretation and Comparison. University of Pittsburgh Press.
[13]
Davies, R. W. 1995. Forced labor under Stalin: the archive revelations. New Left ReviewNew Left Review. 214 (1995).
[14]
Dunham, V.S. 1976. In Stalin’s time: middleclass values in Soviet fiction. Cambridge University Press.
[15]
E. A. Osokina Our Daily Bread. M.E. Sharpe.
[16]
Farnsworth, B. and Viola, L. 1992. Russian peasant women. Oxford University Press.
[17]
Fitzpatrick, S. 2006. Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. Oxford University Press.
[18]
Fitzpatrick, S. 2006. Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. Oxford University Press.
[19]
Fitzpatrick, S. 2000. Julie Hessler, "Cultured Trade: The Stalinist Turn towards Consumerism”. Stalinism: new directions. Routledge.
[20]
Fitzpatrick, S. 1992. Sheila Fitzpatrick, "Becoming Cultured: Socialist Realism and the Representation of Culture and Taste”. The cultural front: power and culture in revolutionary Russia. Cornell University Press.
[21]
Fitzpatrick, S. 2000. Vadim Volkov, "The Concept of Kul’turnost”. Stalinism: new directions. Routledge.
[22]
Fitzpatrick, S. and Slezkine, Y. 2000. In the shadow of revolution: life stories of Russian women from 1917 to the second World War. Princeton University Press.
[23]
Getty, J. Arch ; Rittersporn, Gábor T. ; Zemskov, Viktor N. 1993. Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Pre-War Years: A First Approach on the Basis of Archival Evidence. American Historical ReviewThe American Historical Review. 98, 4 (1993), 1017–1049.
[24]
Goldman, Wendy Z. 1996. Industrial Politics, Peasant Rebellion and the Death of the Proletarian Women’s Movement in the USSR. Slavic ReviewSlavic Review. 55, 1 (1996), 46–77.
[25]
Goldman, W.Z. 1993. Women, the state, and revolution: Soviet family policy and social life, 1917-1936. Cambridge University Press.
[26]
Gregory, P.R. and Lazarev, V.V. 2003. The economics of forced labor: the Soviet Gulag. Hoover Institution Press.
[27]
Harris, James R. 1997. The Growth of the Gulag: Forced Labor in the Urals Region, 1929-31. Russian ReviewThe Russian Review. 56, 2 (1997), 265–280.
[28]
Harris, J.R. 2016. The great fear: Stalin’s terror of the 1930s. Oxford University Press.
[29]
Harrison, M. 2016. One day we will live without fear: everyday lives under the Soviet police state. Hoover Institution Press.
[30]
Hoffmann, D.L. 2003. Stalinist values: the cultural norms of Soviet modernity, 1917-1941. Cornell University Press.
[31]
Ilič, M.J. and University of Birmingham. Centre for Russian and East European Studies 1999. Women workers in the Soviet interwar economy: from ‘protection’ to ‘equality’. Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham.
[32]
Jakobson, M. 2014. Origins of the Gulag: The Soviet Prison Camp System, 1917-1934. The University Press of Kentucky.
[33]
Khlevni︠u︡k, O.V. 2004. The history of the Gulag: from collectivization to the great terror. Yale University Press.
[34]
Khlevni︠u︡k, O.V. 2004. The history of the Gulag: from collectivization to the great terror. Yale University Press.
[35]
Koenker, D. and Bachman, R.D. eds. 1997. Revelations from the Russian archives: documents in English translation. Library of Congress.
[36]
Kotkin, S. 1997. Magnetic Mountain: Stalinism as a Civilization. University of California Press.
[37]
Lapidus, G.W. Women in Soviet society: equality, development and social change. California University Press.
[38]
Lenoe, M.E. 2010. The Kirov murder and Soviet history. Yale University Press.
[39]
Lynne Viola 1986. Bab’i Bunty and Peasant Women’s Protest during Collectivization. Russian ReviewThe Russian Review. 45, 1 (1986), 23–42.
[40]
Markwick, R.D. and Cardona, E.C. 2012. Soviet women on the frontline in the Second World War. Palgrave Macmillan.
[41]
Neary, Rebecca Balmas 1999. Mothering socialist society: the wife-activists’ movement and the Soviet culture of daily life, 1934-41. The Russian ReviewThe Russian Review. 58, 3 (1999).
[42]
Nordlander, David J. 1998. Origins of a Gulag Capital: Magadan and Stalinist Control in the Early 1930s. Slavic ReviewSlavic Review. 57, 4 (1998), 791–812.
[43]
Reid, Susan E. 1998. All Stalin’s Women: Gender and Power in Soviet Art of the 1930s. Slavic ReviewSlavic Review. 57, 1 (1998), 133–173.
[44]
Rimmel, Lesley A. 1997. Another Kind of Fear: The Kirov Murder and the End of Bread Rationing in Leningrad. Slavic ReviewSlavic Review. 56, 3 (1997).
[45]
Rosefielde, Steven 1980. The First ‘Great Leap Forward’ Reconsidered: Lessons of Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago. Slavic ReviewSlavic Review. 39, 4 (1980), 559–587.
[46]
Shepherd, D. and Kelly, C. 1998. Lynne Attwood and Catriona Kelly, ‘Programmes for Identity: The ‘New Man’ and the ‘New Woman’. Constructing Russian culture in the age of revolution: 1881-1940. Oxford University Press.
[47]
Siegelbaum, L.H. 1988. Stakhanovism and the politics of productivity in the USSR, 1935-1941. Cambridge University Press.
[48]
Solzhenit︠s︡yn, A.I. 1974. The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: an experiment in literary investigation. Collins & Harvill Press.
[49]
Toker, L. 2000. Return from the Archipelago: narratives of Gulag survivors. Indiana University Press.
[50]
Waters, Elizabeth 1992. The modernisation of Russian motherhood, 1917-1937. Soviet StudiesSoviet Studies. 44, 1 (1992).
[51]
Whitewood, P. 2015. The Red Army and the Great Terror: Stalin’s purge of the Soviet military. University Press of Kansas.
[52]
1947. Forced Labour in Soviet Russia. Yale University Press.
[53]
18AD. Gender in Twentieth-Century Eastern Europe and the USSR (Gender and History). Palgrave HE UK; 2017 ed. edition.
[54]
1991. Soviet Costume and Textiles 1917-1945. See Comments.