Following the 1917 revolution, thousands of Leo Tolstoy's Russian followers intellectuals and peasants, workers and former soldiers inspired by his ideas about the great moral significance of productive labor, joined together in agricultural communes, believing that they would implement the ideals proclaimed by the Russian revolution: the building of a humane, stateless society, free of violence and exploitation. The goals of the Tolstoyans soon came into conflict with the policies of the Soviet state. With the forced collectivization of agriculture in the late 1920s, most of the Tolstoyan...
Following the 1917 revolution, thousands of Leo Tolstoy's Russian followers intellectuals and peasants, workers and former soldiers inspired by his...