New Books Network

Colleen M. Moore, "The Peasants' War: Russia's Home Front in the First World War and the End of the Autocracy" (McGill-Queen's UP, 2025)

Feb 14, 2026
Colleen M. Moore, historian of late Imperial Russia and WWI, explores how peasant wartime service transformed their relationship with the state. She traces mobilization, propaganda, prohibition, conscription, transport failures, and land redistribution. Short, vivid stories show how peasants gained bargaining power and reshaped political legitimacy.
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ANECDOTE

How Moore Began Studying Peasants

  • Colleen M. Moore traces her interest from a high-school Russian studies teacher and a college Great War seminar.
  • Her doctoral mentor, Ben Ekel, introduced peasant studies which shaped her focus on peasants in World War I.
INSIGHT

Peasant Service Revealed State Hypocrisy

  • Nicholas II and officials underestimated peasant power by assuming peasants lacked national consciousness.
  • Peasants did mobilize and their wartime sacrifices revealed a gap between service and state treatment, fueling demands for reciprocity.
INSIGHT

War And Media Forged Peasant Consciousness

  • World War I created mass mobilization and media exposure that connected peasants across Russia.
  • That shared awareness turned local hardships into a national peasant consciousness demanding redress.
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