
audiobook
by Alexander Petrunkevitch, Frank Alfred Golder, Samuel N. (Samuel Northrup) Harper, Robert Joseph Kerner
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, and THE JUGO-SLAV MOVEMENT
By Alexander Petrunkevitch, Samuel Northrup, Harper Frank, Alfred Golder, and Robert Joseph Kerner
PREFACE
MARCH 18, 1918. THE ROLE OF THE INTELLECTUALS IN THE LIBERATING MOVEMENT
FORCES BEHIND THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION FORCES BEHIND THE RUSSIAN
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION - By Frank Alfred Golder
THE JUGO-SLAV MOVEMENT - By Robert J. Keener
APPENDICES DECLARATION OF THE JUGO-SLAV CLUB OF THE AUSTRIAN PARLIAMENT - ON MAY 30, 1917
APPENDIX II - THE PACT OF CORFU
A vivid collection of contemporary essays, this volume opens with a sweeping look at the 1917 upheaval that toppled an empire in a single day. Contributors weave together newspaper accounts, private letters, and firsthand observations to portray how soldiers, workers and peasants rallied while intellectuals grappled with their own roles. The narrative captures the uneasy optimism that the new order could bring liberty to millions, even as doubts linger about foreign interference and the future of the old elite. By juxtaposing public statements with personal correspondences, the book lets listeners hear the raw arguments that shaped the early days of the revolution.
The second part turns to the emerging Jugo‑Slav movement, a smaller but fiercely resilient struggle for national identity in the shadow of the Great War. Through vivid portraits of cultural leaders and their defiant quests against oppression, the essays reveal how this movement intertwined with the broader conflict. Though less dramatic than the Russian turmoil, the stories convey an enduring hope for justice and self‑determination. Together, the two sections offer a richly textured snapshot of a world in flux, inviting listeners to understand the motivations and anxieties of those who lived through it.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (150K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Starner, David Widger and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2005-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1875–1964
A pioneering spider expert who turned close observation into vivid science writing, he helped shape modern arachnology at Yale. His work ranged from living species to ancient fossil spiders, bringing both precision and curiosity to a field few readers ever see up close.
View all books
1877–1929
An adventurous historian of Russia and Alaska, he helped build one of the great early collections of Slavic materials at Stanford’s Hoover Institution. His work combined archival detective work, travel, and firsthand reporting from a world in upheaval.
View all books1882–1943
A pioneering American scholar of Russia, he helped bring Russian language, history, and politics into university study in the United States. His work at the University of Chicago made him an important early guide to understanding Russia during years of dramatic change.
View all books1887–1956
A leading American historian of Eastern Europe, he helped build Slavic studies in the United States while writing about Russia, Czechoslovakia, and the wider Slavic world. His career bridged scholarship and public affairs at a time when the map of Europe was being redrawn.
View all books
by Order of the Eastern Star. General Grand Chapter

by Robert Lewis Dabney

by Aurora Mardiganian

by Dan Breen

by comte de Emmanuel-Auguste-Dieudonné Las Cases

by comte de Emmanuel-Auguste-Dieudonné Las Cases

by Mariia Bochkareva, Isaac Don Levine

by Richard Taylor