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"The Soviet passport's antiphonal role, as both technique of oppressive state control and as a positive sign of equal rights and status for citizens, gave it extraordinary importance in everyday life and made it a quasi-sacred object. Thoroughly researched, vividly written and moving, this book is essential reading for an understanding of changing citizenship regimes in Russia."Caroline Humphrey, University of Cambridge"In this meticulously researched and powerfully argued book, Albert Baiburin mines the history of the Soviet passport as both an instrument of social engineering and control and a totem of individual experience and cultural creativity. The result is an innovative and fascinating account of the Soviet experiment."Daniel Beer, Royal Holloway, University of London"For Soviet citizens, the passport was a crucial possession that both enabled and restricted them. Albert Baiburin's exhaustive and lively account, fluently translated by Stephen Dalziel, shows why passports were so central to the maintenance of the party dictatorship."Robert Service, University of Oxford"significantly advances our understanding of a crucial institution of Soviet governance"H-Soz-Kult"scintillating, panoramic history-cum-ethnography of the Soviet passport. Filled with surprising insights and details, it now appears in Stephen Dalziel's superb and lavishly illustrated translation."Times Literary Supplement"thoughtful, deeply researched and fluently translated"History Today
List of Abbreviations
List of Illustrations
Foreword by Catriona Kelly
Preface
Introduction
PART I: THE HISTORY OF THE SOVIET PASSPORT SYSTEM
Chapter 1: The Formation of 'the Passport Portrait' in Russia
Chapter 2: Fifteen Passport-less Years
Chapter 3: The Introduction of the Passport System in the USSR
(1932-1936)
General Situation
The Official Version of the Introduction of Passports
Organizational Work
Issuing Passports
'Legal Excesses'
The Second Phase of the Introduction of Passports
The Consequences of the Introduction of Passports
Chapter 4: Passport Regimes and Passport Reforms
Passport Regimes
The Hundred-and-First Kilometre
The Propiska
Registering Natural Population Changes
Maintaining the Passport Regime
Statutes on Passports and Instructions for Passport Work in 1940 and 1953
Reform Projects of the 1960s
The 1974 Statute
From the Soviet to the Russian Passport System
Part II: THE PASSPORT AS A BUREAUCRATIC DEVICE
Chapter 1: The Passport Template and the Individual's Basic Information
The Passport Template
'Surname, Name, Patronymic'
'Place and Date of Birth'
'Ethnic Origin'
'The Personal Signature'
'Social Status'
'Liability for Military Service'
Chapter 2: The Notes and Properties of the Passport
'Who Issued the Passport'
'On the Basis of Which Documents is the Passport Issued'
'People listed in the holder's passport'
The Photograph
Special Observations
Observations about the Propiska
Part III: WHAT THE PASSPORT WAS IN PRACTICE: THE EVIDENCE IN DOCUMENTS AND MEMOIRS
Chapter 1: Receiving a Passport
The Right to a Passport
Defining Ethnicity
Taking the Passport Photograph
How do I sign?
The Passport Desk and the Pasportistka
Receiving the Passport
Chapter 2: Life With - and Without - the Passport
Look After It; Should You Carry It With You?
The Document Check
Changing One's Name
A 'Clean' Passport
Marriages of Convenience
Lost! What it Meant to be Without Your Passport
Refusing to Have a Passport
'The Most Important Document' and Why it was Needed
Conclusion
Appendix: Interview Details
Glossary
Bibliography
Notes
Index
Albert Baiburin is Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the European University at St Petersburg