Olga Shapir

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Olga Shapir
Born(1850-09-10)September 10, 1850
Oranienbaum
DiedJuly 13, 1916(1916-07-13) (aged 65)
Saratov Governorate

Olga Andreyevna Shapir, born Kisliakova, (Russian: Ольга Андреевна Шапир; September 10, 1850 – July 13, 1916) was a Russian writer, activist, and outspoken feminist.

Early life and family[edit]

Olga Shapir was born on September 10, 1850, in Oranienbaum, Russia (now Lomonosov, Russia) as one of nine children to a peasant family.[1][2] Her father, Andrei Petrovich Kisliakov, was a former serf and employed as a military official in the commandant's headquarters in Oranienbaum under the Decembrist leader Pavel Pestel.[3] Her mother, Lizaveta (Abramovich) Kisliakova, was of Swedish descent.[4]

Shapir notably attended Alexandrovskaia gymnasium from 1863 to 1865, a school founded by Emperor Alexander I, and earned a gold metal as a top student in the class. Shapir's intellectual curiosity led her to attend public lectures in 1870, including the “Vladminirskie Courses” which were created as a limited opportunity for Russian women to continue their education and participate in academic circles.[5][4]

At the age of twenty-one in 1871, Shapir declared independence from her family.[6] One year later in 1872, Shapir married Lazar Shapir, who was expelled from the Medical-Surgical Academy in St. Petersburg for his active membership in the Nardonaia rasprava (Popular Punishment) led by Sergei Nechaev. She was able to get her husband reinstated as a zemstvo (local authority) doctor and the couple moved to the Tsaritsynsky District of the Saratovskaia province where he practiced medicine. They lived for a time communally in St. Petersburg and established connections with the Kornilova sisters' circle, which plotted against Tsar Alexander II.[1] The couple had two children together.[4]

Lazar granted Shapir permission to complete a formal education, which was atypical for women of the time.[5]

Career and Writing Genre[edit]

As a young adult, Shapir aspired to earn her own income and wrote short articles and translations for Russian newspapers Bizhevye vedomosti (Stock-Exchange News) and Novoe vremia (New Times). Once she separated from her family, she also managed Aleksandr Cheresov's Vasileostrovsky Library.[5]

While living in Saratov province with Lazar, Shapir began writing her own works. Shapir's writing can be thematically evaluated through distinct periods of time.[7] Her first novel, entitled Na poroge zhizne (On the Threshold of Life) was published in 1879. Between 1879 and 1887, her novels, including A High Price to Pay: A Family Story (Dorogoi tsenoi: iz semeinoi prozy, 1882) and Funeral Feast (Pominki, 1886) evaluate female slavery. The protagonists abandon their own personal or professional ambitions to take care of her family. Then between 1879 and 1904, Shapir featured "the new woman" in her books, a concept developed by Aleksandra Kollontai, giving female heroines autonomy and control over the story's plot. Integral novels displaying this character include Mirages (Mirazhi, 1889), She Returned (Vernulas’, 1892), The Settlement, Avdot’ia’s Daughters, the story ‘Dunechka’ (‘Dunechka’, 1904) and In the Stormy Years, which is perhaps her best-known work.[7][8] In the Stormy Years pulls on Shapir's own experiences as a member of Nechaev's radical group and spoke out to protect Dostoevsky and his novel, The Devils.[1]

Many works were published in popular journals of the time, including Otechestvennye Zapiski, Severny Vestnik and Vestnik Evropy.[3][9]

Shapir also published an autobiography in 1907 that is available in Russian. In addition to speaking about the development of her prose and the influence of her upbringing, she documents how feminism shaped her focus as a writer. She says, "I recognized that the only way in which I could make a contribution of any value was to write from a woman's perspective and to reveal what only women can see in the eternal problem of love, in family relations, and in women's lack of rights in society" (p. 54).[8]

Politics[edit]

Shapir was politically aligned with the left like many other women prose writers known as a liberal feminist.[8] Sapir was, as she called it, a "feminist of distinction." As a respected public speaker and writer to equal rights feminists (ravnopravki) in Russia, she advocated that women should not aspire to the same set of standards as men. Instead of striving for these minuscule legal changes, they must rethink systems in society and culture that perpetuate their unequal treatment. Shapir believed many larger conflicts could be traced back to inequity between sexes.[5][7]

Activism and Philanthropy[edit]

In 1895, Shapir joined the Russian Women's Mutual Philanthropic Society and held a number of leadership positions including manager of the Commission on Fundraising, manager of the Society's Department of Abstracts and member of the governing Council that decided on the organization's policies. Shapir considered the Society to be a place for females to convene and discuss their shared experiences and hardships. They focused on ways to empower the ongoing Russian women's movement. Members largely consisted of educated, upper-class individuals who sought to improve their own status while providing aid to those who were less fortunate. Shapir's disagreement with the Society's administrative leader, Anna N. Shabanova, on charitable projects led her to resign from the Council but continue working in the Suffrage Department to plan the First All-Russian Women's Congress in 1908.[5][6]

Shapir also joined the Women's Equal Rights Union in 1905, born out of the first Russian Revolution, which focused on securing women's suffrage. The group aligned with left-wing Russian political organizations and parties and played an active role in civil disobedience.[5]

Shapir played a monumental role in the First All-Russian Women's Congress held in 1908. The congress was a significant moment in Russian history, as it gathered thousands of female delegates of varying backgrounds to chart a path forward toward a more equitable future. It was composed of majority middle-class citizens with many well-established organizers. The congress drew inspiration from both the International Women's Movement conference in Chicago in 1903 and the Russian liberation movement. While it was originally planned for 1905, it was postponed three years because governor-general, Trepov, required the speeches be censored amidst ongoing tension between Russian society and the government. By 1908, the congress was granted permission to widen the conversation to include the economic and social position of women and their involvement in civil rights movements.[5][10][11]

Shapir compiled a report entitled "Ideals of the Future," where she argued to the cohort that women's worldviews are of equal importance to men's. Other topics discussed during the congress included the woman's role in the family, access to education, and employment. With so many opinions present, the congress was unable to reach unanimity about an intervention and so no direct action resulted at a grand scale. Still, Shapir's large involvement in its production spurred provocative discourse and encouraged women to come together and share their experiences during the old régime.[10]

Legacy[edit]

Together with Ekaterina Letkova, Valentina Dmitryeva, and Anastasiya Vervitskaya, Shapir was at the forefront of feminist thought.[8] Shapir's literary and theoretical works reached a diverse audience of citizens and Russian feminists alike. During her long career, she was published in renowned journals and magazines, and used her platform to speak about the female experience. She differentiated herself from other Russian writers by challenging stereotypes and displaying high-achieving women in her work. Shapir's contribution to the Suffrage Department of the Russian Women's Philanthropic Society played an essential role in crafting legislature adopted by the State Duma that directly awarded females their inheritance separate from their husband.[5]

Shapir's Gravestone

Shapir died on July 13, 1916, of illness in Saint Petersburg and is buried in the Literatorskie Mostki of Volkovskiy Orthodox Cemetery.[5]

Published Books[4][edit]

  • Antipody, 1882
  • Na raznykha iazykakh, 1884
  • Povesti i rasskazy, 1889
  • Bez livbui, 1890
  • Ee siatel'stuvo, 1891
  • Mirazhi, 1892
  • Vernulas'!, V slobodke. Deti otkazali, 1894
  • Liubou', 1896
  • Starye pesni, 1990
  • Avdot'iny dochki, 1901
  • Zakonnye zheny, 1902
  • Drug destuvo, 1903
  • Invalidy i novobrantsy, 1905
  • Ne proverili, 1905
  • V burnye gody, 1907
  • Sonina khatva, 1908
  • Chuzhoi, 1908
  • Roza Sarona, 1910
  • V temnote, 1910
  • Sobranie sochineniia, 1910-1912

English Translations[edit]

  • The Settlement, from An Anthology of Russian Women's Writing, 1777-1992, Oxford University Press, 1994.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Goldberg., Ruthchild, Rochelle (2010). Equality & revolution : women's rights in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-6066-9. OCLC 468973471.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ "War, Revolution, Victory?", Equality and Revolution, University of Pittsburgh Press, pp. 211–238, doi:10.2307/j.ctt5hjp1d.14, retrieved 2023-03-05
  3. ^ a b Kelly, Catriona (1994). An Anthology of Russian women's writing, 1777-1992. Oxford University Press. OCLC 624436066.
  4. ^ a b c d Vishnevetsky, I. G.; Kalb, Judith E.; Ogden, J. Alexander, eds. (2004). Russian writers of the Silver Age, 1890-1925. Farmington Mills, MI: Thomson/Gale. ISBN 9780787668327. OCLC 54407824.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Noonan, Norma C.; Nechemias, Carol (2001). Encyclopedia of Russian Women's Movements. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-30438-5.
  6. ^ a b Biographical dictionary of women's movements and feminisms in Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe : 19th and 20th centuries. Francisca de Haan, Krasimira Daskalova, Anna Loutfi (1st ed.). New York: Central European University Press. 2006. ISBN 1-4237-4938-3. OCLC 63197522.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ a b c Rosenholm, Arja; Savkina, Irina (2012), ""How Women Should Write": Russian Women's Writing in the Nineteenth Century", Women in Nineteenth-Century Russia: Lives and Culture, Open Book Publishers, doi:10.11647/obp.0018.08, ISBN 9781906924652
  8. ^ a b c d Kelly, Catriona (1998-04-02), "The 'Feminine Pen' and the Imagination of National Tradition: Russian Women's Writing, 1820–1880", A History of Russian Women's Writing 1820–1992, Oxford University Press, pp. 19–78, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198159643.003.0002, ISBN 978-0-19-815964-3, retrieved 2023-03-05
  9. ^ Cristensen, Hilda, ed. (2004). Crossing Borders: Re-Mapping Women's Movements at the Turn of the 21st Century. University Press of Southern Denmark. pp. 146–147. ISBN 8778388597.
  10. ^ a b EDMONDSON, LINDA (1976). "Russian Feminists and the First All-Russian Congress of Women". Russian History. 3 (2): 123–149. doi:10.1163/187633176X00080. ISSN 0094-288X. JSTOR 24649709.
  11. ^ Nikolaevna., Selivanova, Nina (1923). Russia's women. Hyperion Press, 1976. ISBN 0-88355-352-X. OCLC 613139854.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)