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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages. This paper is a comparison of the Russian workers of today to the Russian peasants and village life in the late Tsarist period. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JGAtsars.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
late Tsarist period. RUSSIANS IN THE PAST The social changes that have occurred since the collapse of the Soviet Union in post-Communist Russia are grand and far-reaching.
It can be argued that this singular historical episode was the integral component to opening up myriad opportunities for its people, not the least of which include such subgroups as
women, ethnic workers, minorities and farmers. Business people, as well, have benefited from the mindset expansion that accompanied the political fall. "A new breed of Russian civil servants
with close business ties are trying to turn government departments and ministries into agencies for serving the interests of the business community. The Russian civil service is also facing
an exodus of skilled and semi-skilled personnel who are leaving for more lucrative jobs" (Murtazayev 12). The loss of freedom and reason was a concept that greatly worried Spanish
philosopher and social theorist Jose Ortega y Gasset. At the time of World War I, totalitarianism was taking a stronghold upon Europe, while the Great Depression proved to threaten
the "nature and destiny of the Western civilization" (Anonymous PG). The Enlightenment had begun to show signs of wear, directly affecting the manner by which freedom and reason were
slowly but surely being cast aside. It can be argued that with the weakening influence of World War I, reason and freedom stood little chance of escaping the impact
of totalitarianism. It was Ortegas contention that through the means of such barbarism, those who were "intellectually undisciplined and culturally unrefined" (Anonymous 20eorteg.html) would soon serve as the new
ambassadors to European existence. Asserting that such masses would prove fatal to the Europes cultural, economic and political progress, Ortega was mightily concerned with the fascist and communist implications
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