About Through Bolshevik Russia
Introduction
I A Starving People
II Making Our Plans
III Ghosts
IV Investigation or Propaganda?
V The Communists
VI The Artistic Life of Russia
VII The Military Power of Russia
VIII Education and Religion
IX Off to Moscow
X An Interview with Lenin
XI Talks with Communists and Others
XII The Dictatorship of the Communists
XIII The Suppression of Liberty
XIV Down the Volga
XV The Future of Russia
About the author
Ethel Snowden, Viscountess Snowden (born Ethel Annakin; 8 September 1881 - 22 February 1951), was a British socialist, human rights activist, and feminist politician. From a middle-class background, she became a Christian Socialist through a radical preacher and initially promoted temperance and teetotalism in the slums of Liverpool. She aligned to the Fabian Society and later the Independent Labour Party, earning an income by lecturing in Britain and abroad. Snowden was one of the leading campaigners for women's suffrage before the First World War, then founding The Women's Peace Crusade to oppose the war and call for a negotiated peace. After a visit to the Soviet Union she developed a strong criticism of its system, which made her unpopular when relayed to the left-wing in Britain.
Snowden married the prominent Labour Party politician and future Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Snowden. She rose up the social scale in the 1920s, much to her pleasure, and she welcomed appointment as a Governor of the BBC and as a Director of the Royal Opera House. Although her husband received a Viscountcy, money became tight and she led the way in caring for him; after his death, she resumed temperance campaigning as well as journalism. She tended to be a controversial public speaker, who would fill with enthusiasm for a project and pursue it to the disregard of anything that stood in her way; it was said of her that "tact or discretion were foreign to her nature". (wikipedia.org)
Show more