Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961
Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961 book tells the story of Harvey and Alice Richards amazing trip to the Soviet Union in the summer of 1961. Their goal was to document the social safety network that existed in the Soviet Union for women and children in a socialist society. Alice Richards' script tells the story of our journey as she narrated the films "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 1: Women of Russia" and "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 2: Far from Moscow". Her script is presented here as the text of the book along with Harvey Richards' photography of the USSR during the Cold War. I added subheadings and captions (in italics) to the photos as needed.
The book follows the films as closely as possible adding many previously unpublished still images taken during the filming and many screen grabs from the films. The resulting book reveals the achievements of the USSR in creating a social safety network for women and children. Alice led our efforts in meeting and filming in a variety of settings including work places, maternity wards, schools, universities, homes and child care institutions, and even a fashion show. We spent most of our time in Moscow but also visited Sochi on the Black Sea coast, Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and Irkutsk in Siberia.
Two documentary films and hundreds of images preserved in the Harvey Richards Media Archive, and presented in this book, are a portrait of the Soviet Union at a time in history 15 years after the end of World War II. Every adult in these photos had experienced the cataclysmic events of the war. Millions of their contemporaries had died in the fight to destroy fascism and defeat Nazi Germany. Millions of homes had been destroyed during the invasion and bombings leaving twenty five million homeless. There were 20 million more women than men in the post war world of the USSR which, in 1961, was still in the midst of rebuilding itself anew after all of the destruction and death of World War II.
Now, in 2022, decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the history of care and relative prosperity experienced by women and children during the Soviet period is a lasting legacy in the world still struggling to achieve equality and justice for women. Our trip occurred at the height of the cold war when visiting the Soviet Union was rare for Americans. Alice and Harvey's purpose was to contribute to the peace movement by offering positive images and information documenting the remarkable advances achieved in the conditions of women and children in a socialist society.
When we returned to California, Harvey and Alice edited and released the two films. The films were then projected for small groups locally in the San Francisco area interested in helping to build friendly public opinion about the the USSR to counter Cold War hostility.
Between 1965 and 2011 the films went into storage. As part of creating the Harvey Richards Media Archive web site in 2011, I digitized the films and extracted short clips from each film which I put up on YouTube as previews. I entitled the clips from the Soviet films "Ordinary Life in the USSR, 1961." As of January, 2022 over one million viewers have visited my YouTube channel, including over 682,000 views of the "Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961" clip alone. Viewers have come from 120 countries. This amazing response to the video has motivated the publication of this book.
Now, years after both Harvey and Alice's deaths, these films have experienced a renaissance and will hopefully contribute to the global struggles to create social networks of support for women and children everywhere. Creating and maintaining a social safety net for women in all societies is a necessary step along this road.
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Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961
Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961 book tells the story of Harvey and Alice Richards amazing trip to the Soviet Union in the summer of 1961. Their goal was to document the social safety network that existed in the Soviet Union for women and children in a socialist society. Alice Richards' script tells the story of our journey as she narrated the films "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 1: Women of Russia" and "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 2: Far from Moscow". Her script is presented here as the text of the book along with Harvey Richards' photography of the USSR during the Cold War. I added subheadings and captions (in italics) to the photos as needed.
The book follows the films as closely as possible adding many previously unpublished still images taken during the filming and many screen grabs from the films. The resulting book reveals the achievements of the USSR in creating a social safety network for women and children. Alice led our efforts in meeting and filming in a variety of settings including work places, maternity wards, schools, universities, homes and child care institutions, and even a fashion show. We spent most of our time in Moscow but also visited Sochi on the Black Sea coast, Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and Irkutsk in Siberia.
Two documentary films and hundreds of images preserved in the Harvey Richards Media Archive, and presented in this book, are a portrait of the Soviet Union at a time in history 15 years after the end of World War II. Every adult in these photos had experienced the cataclysmic events of the war. Millions of their contemporaries had died in the fight to destroy fascism and defeat Nazi Germany. Millions of homes had been destroyed during the invasion and bombings leaving twenty five million homeless. There were 20 million more women than men in the post war world of the USSR which, in 1961, was still in the midst of rebuilding itself anew after all of the destruction and death of World War II.
Now, in 2022, decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the history of care and relative prosperity experienced by women and children during the Soviet period is a lasting legacy in the world still struggling to achieve equality and justice for women. Our trip occurred at the height of the cold war when visiting the Soviet Union was rare for Americans. Alice and Harvey's purpose was to contribute to the peace movement by offering positive images and information documenting the remarkable advances achieved in the conditions of women and children in a socialist society.
When we returned to California, Harvey and Alice edited and released the two films. The films were then projected for small groups locally in the San Francisco area interested in helping to build friendly public opinion about the the USSR to counter Cold War hostility.
Between 1965 and 2011 the films went into storage. As part of creating the Harvey Richards Media Archive web site in 2011, I digitized the films and extracted short clips from each film which I put up on YouTube as previews. I entitled the clips from the Soviet films "Ordinary Life in the USSR, 1961." As of January, 2022 over one million viewers have visited my YouTube channel, including over 682,000 views of the "Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961" clip alone. Viewers have come from 120 countries. This amazing response to the video has motivated the publication of this book.
Now, years after both Harvey and Alice's deaths, these films have experienced a renaissance and will hopefully contribute to the global struggles to create social networks of support for women and children everywhere. Creating and maintaining a social safety net for women in all societies is a necessary step along this road.
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Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961

Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961

by Paul Richards
Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961

Ordinary Life in the USSR: Women and Children in the Soviet Union, 1961

by Paul Richards

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$39.99 
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Overview

Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961 book tells the story of Harvey and Alice Richards amazing trip to the Soviet Union in the summer of 1961. Their goal was to document the social safety network that existed in the Soviet Union for women and children in a socialist society. Alice Richards' script tells the story of our journey as she narrated the films "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 1: Women of Russia" and "A Visit to the Soviet Union, Part 2: Far from Moscow". Her script is presented here as the text of the book along with Harvey Richards' photography of the USSR during the Cold War. I added subheadings and captions (in italics) to the photos as needed.
The book follows the films as closely as possible adding many previously unpublished still images taken during the filming and many screen grabs from the films. The resulting book reveals the achievements of the USSR in creating a social safety network for women and children. Alice led our efforts in meeting and filming in a variety of settings including work places, maternity wards, schools, universities, homes and child care institutions, and even a fashion show. We spent most of our time in Moscow but also visited Sochi on the Black Sea coast, Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and Irkutsk in Siberia.
Two documentary films and hundreds of images preserved in the Harvey Richards Media Archive, and presented in this book, are a portrait of the Soviet Union at a time in history 15 years after the end of World War II. Every adult in these photos had experienced the cataclysmic events of the war. Millions of their contemporaries had died in the fight to destroy fascism and defeat Nazi Germany. Millions of homes had been destroyed during the invasion and bombings leaving twenty five million homeless. There were 20 million more women than men in the post war world of the USSR which, in 1961, was still in the midst of rebuilding itself anew after all of the destruction and death of World War II.
Now, in 2022, decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the history of care and relative prosperity experienced by women and children during the Soviet period is a lasting legacy in the world still struggling to achieve equality and justice for women. Our trip occurred at the height of the cold war when visiting the Soviet Union was rare for Americans. Alice and Harvey's purpose was to contribute to the peace movement by offering positive images and information documenting the remarkable advances achieved in the conditions of women and children in a socialist society.
When we returned to California, Harvey and Alice edited and released the two films. The films were then projected for small groups locally in the San Francisco area interested in helping to build friendly public opinion about the the USSR to counter Cold War hostility.
Between 1965 and 2011 the films went into storage. As part of creating the Harvey Richards Media Archive web site in 2011, I digitized the films and extracted short clips from each film which I put up on YouTube as previews. I entitled the clips from the Soviet films "Ordinary Life in the USSR, 1961." As of January, 2022 over one million viewers have visited my YouTube channel, including over 682,000 views of the "Ordinary Life in the USSR 1961" clip alone. Viewers have come from 120 countries. This amazing response to the video has motivated the publication of this book.
Now, years after both Harvey and Alice's deaths, these films have experienced a renaissance and will hopefully contribute to the global struggles to create social networks of support for women and children everywhere. Creating and maintaining a social safety net for women in all societies is a necessary step along this road.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781734404203
Publisher: Estuary Press
Publication date: 05/17/2022
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.46(d)

About the Author

Paul David Richards was born in San Francisco, California in 1944 to working class parents, grew up in Oakland across the Bay. He attended Verde Valley School in Sedona Arizona where he rode horses and visited Mexico and the Indian reservations of the area. Entering the University of California in Berkeley in 1961. Entering the University of California in Berkeley in 1961, he became immersed in the student civil rights and peace movements, spent two month in jail for protesting racist hiring practices of bay area businesses, resisted the draft and opposed the war in Vietnam. He fled to Ghana, West Africa, briefly in 1966 to avoid the draft, returning after two months to face the jail sentences for past sit-in arrests. He flew from Paris and landed in San Francisco County Jail. Soon after, he moved to Madison Wisconsin, 1967-1971, where he earned a PhD in economic history specializing in labor history. His father, Harvey Richards, handed him his 22 films and thousands of still photos in 1987 at the end of Harvey's 30 year career as a photographer. Paul compiled some of his father's photos in a book, Critical Focus, and established Estuary Press to publish it and to license and archive the photo collection. Upon retiring from construction in 2011, he began collaboration with his wife, Nina Serrano, as an independent publisher at Estuary Press. He published Heart Suite, a trilogy of poetry books collecting Nina's poetry written from 1969 to 2012. He created website for Estuary Press, estuarypress.com, for Nina, ninaserrano.com and for the photo collection, The Harvey Richards Media Archive, hrmediaarchive.estuarypress.com.
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