Women in Soviet Russia today are used to being able to pursue careers and dreams. However, they gained these rights in 1917, only about a century ago. When Lenin took power in 1917 of Russia, he laid the foundation for a Soviet communism style government. Communism is a type of ideology in which everything in society is publicly owned, and there are no classes. Essentially, all citizens are treated equally and no one holds more power than each other. This type of government allowed women in Soviet Russia to gain many new rights, such as better career opportunities (The Role of Women in Soviet Russia), because women and men were treated equally. However, women gaining the right to work in Soviet Russia impacted them negatively socially because it caused them to take on a greater workload, and negatively economically because women faced discrimination in jobs. …show more content…
Even though in “principle” women were supposed to be treated equally, in practice they were usually not, oftentimes having to balance their jobs with their housework and children. (The Role of Women in Soviet Russia). Other men would expect a women, even if she has a career or is in the process of pursuing one, to finish all the chores and take care of the children, all the things society had deemed as women’s work. Therefore, women would juggle the responsibility of home and work. This put a lot of pressure on women, with some authors calling Russian women “emaciated” during Soviet Union’s pursuit of communism