
New Books in History 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 Russian peasant life, explores how World War I transformed peasant-state relations. She recounts mass mobilization, resistance to vodka bans, conscription crises, land seizures, and wartime provisioning struggles. Short, vivid stories show how wartime service became leverage that reshaped political authority.
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Misread Loyalty Of The Tsar
- Nicholas II overestimated a special bond with peasants and ignored contrary information.
- Peasants' wartime sacrifices revealed the regime's failure to reciprocate, undermining loyalty.
War Created Peasant Public Sphere
- World War I brought mass mobilization and wider peasant exposure to national news.
- Shared wartime experiences and markets made peasants aware of collective bargaining power.
Tsar's Legitimacy Became Conditional
- The myth of the Tsar shifted from paternalist charity to conditional legitimacy.
- Peasants began to expect protection as a reward for wartime service, making authority contingent.



