The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century is a book by Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky originally published in Russian in 1898. For this he was awarded his doctorate by Moscow University. It was republished in Russia several times, running to three editions and two reprints by 1928. John P. McKay regarded the book as an "all-time outstanding contributions to Russian economic history, and to economic history in general". Tugan-Baranovsky was a Legal Marxist, and in opposition to the populist narodniks, he argued that the Russian Empire far from being able to avoid going through a capitalist stage of development, had already experienced substantial capitalist development.
Editions and translations
Russian language
- 1898 First edition, St Petersburg
- 1900 Second Edition, St Petersburg
- 1907 Third Edition, St Petersburg
- Reprinted in 1922 (Moscow), 1934 and 1938 (Moscow-Leningrad)
Translations
- German Translation: Geschichte der Russischen Fabrik, based on 2nd Edition translated by B. Minzes (Berlin, 1900)
- English Translation: The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century, based on 3rd Edition, translated by Arthur and Claora Levin, under the supervision of Gregory Grossman (Illinois: Homewood, 1970)
References
- Mikhail Tugan-Baranovsky; Levin, Arthur; Levin, Claora S. (1970). The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century (english Translation ed.). Illinois: Homewood.
- Kowal, Lubomyr (1972). "M. I. Tugan Baranowski: The Russian Factory in the 19th Century (Book Review)". Journal of European Economic History. 1 (2 (Winter 1972)): 820–821.
- ^ McKay, John P. (1972). "Review of The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century". The Business History Review. 46 (1): 137–139. doi:10.2307/3112804. ISSN 0007-6805.