By Gene Ogorodov
Alexandra
Kollontai is an interesting figure that emerged out of Russian
Revolutionary politics. A child of a Finish peasant and a Russian
General, reared in luxury, she was an early member of the Russian Social
Democratic Party that opposed both Martov and Lenin in the
Bolshevik/Menshevik split who, like Trotsky, joined Lenin's Bolshevik's
in the eleventh hour rising to prominence in the early Soviet Union. She
shattered the glass ceiling as a Peoples' Commissar (Soviet equivalent
of a Cabinet Secretary) in 1917 and Ambassador in 1923 half a century
before Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi, or Golda Meir became Prime
Ministers in there respective countries.
Outspoken and fearless Kollontai relentlessly pursued social and economic equality for women in the Soviet Union, going toe-to-toe with anyone including Lenin when ever she felt the need. She vehemently opposed prostitution and marital infidelity as exploitative for women. (In fact A Great Love was itself written as little more than a thinly veiled attack on Lenin's extra-marital affair with Inessa Armand). Nevertheless, Kollontai was one of the first proponents of "free love." Marriage was, she believed, a relic of the patriarchal domination of women and would vanish along with the state in a perfectly free and communal society.
A Great Love
qua piece of literature is hardly worthy of sitting next to the works
of great Soviet writers like Babel and Pasternak (Kollontai did intend
this to be just a Romance), but as a feminist expose it has views on
sexuality and gender roles strikingly familiar to a 21st Century
audience. Kollontai's genius wasn't in the beauty of her writing but in
the clarity and well developed position of her politics. Her views on
gender roles, sexuality, and motherhood were both revolutionary and, as
time has shown, surprisingly practical. Her dynamic forward thinking on
gender and sexuality has influenced not just Socialist societies but
societies that would consider the idea of Marxist-Leninist Socialism
repugnant making her unquestionably one of the most significant
feminists to have ever lived. Outspoken and fearless Kollontai relentlessly pursued social and economic equality for women in the Soviet Union, going toe-to-toe with anyone including Lenin when ever she felt the need. She vehemently opposed prostitution and marital infidelity as exploitative for women. (In fact A Great Love was itself written as little more than a thinly veiled attack on Lenin's extra-marital affair with Inessa Armand). Nevertheless, Kollontai was one of the first proponents of "free love." Marriage was, she believed, a relic of the patriarchal domination of women and would vanish along with the state in a perfectly free and communal society.
Other short stories and essays have been included in this volume to round-out what would have been a rather thin book with only a brief novella with short works that help further develop the ideas that she addresses in A Great Love.