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Intro; Dedication; Acknowledgments; Contents; Notes on contributors; List of figures; List of tables; 1: Fields in Russian economic history; Expanding field theory, with help from Russia's economic reality; But why fields and field theory?; Our exploratory use of fields; Note on translation; Works cited; Part I; Introduction to part I; 2: Global fields and economic theory: The impact of German scholarship on Russian political economy in the eighteenth and nineteenth century; Universities arise: The (Russian) state and (German) scholars.

Russia, Germans, and uncertain economics: The political economy of serfdom; Reaction and the "foreign": Economics insulated; Routinization of the hybrid: Field relations insulated and normalized, somewhat; Works cited; 3: Compulsion and resistance: Origins of the Russian research tradition and political economy of the special; Economics as a field of science and vocation in Russia; The universal and the national: "Schools" of economic thought; The Russian school of economic thought: Three beginnings, three sources; Political economy of the special: Russian economics.

In place of a conclusion: Lessons and significance of the Russian research tradition; Works cited; 4: Statistics comes to Russia: Science, quantitative analysis, and shifts in economic thinking; First steps; K.F. Hermann and statistical science; After Hermann; Conclusion; Works cited; 5: Networks, fields, and political economy in Fin-De-Siècle Russia: The life and work of Nikolai Sieber; Sieber and the university; Study and travel abroad; Publications and fields of political discourses; Tensions of economic and political fields, or, was Sieber a Ukrainofile socialist?; Conclusion; Works cited.

6: Fields of discourse perturbed: The revolution of 1905 and economic teaching and thinking at St. Petersburg University; Organizing research and teaching: University autonomy and academic freedom; The development of economics: Academic and socio-political contexts; The first Russian Revolution and the University; Teaching political economy after the 1905 revolution; Political reaction and administrative pressure; Conclusion; Works cited; 7: Repressive fields: economic theory in late Stalinism and the Leningrad Affair; Introduction: Soviet economics and Stalinist fields of discourse.

Soviet political economy by the 1950s: An unsettled field; The Voznesenskiis: Early newcomers; The Leningrad Affair; Ideological "discussions" in the Stalinist system; Conclusion; Works cited; Part II; Introduction to Part II; 8: Empire, orthodoxy, and economy: The influence of Russian orthodoxy and empire on economic fields in pre-revolutionary Russia; Economic fields, empires, and religion; In the beginning: Fields of religion and power and Muscovite institutions; Fields of gift exchange in peasant communities; Empire and capitalism: The impact of Large projects on economic fields.

Conclusion; Works cited; 9: State, markets, and fields in Russian history; The state in Russia: Historical preconditions for institutional and field construction; The role of the state in removing barriers to the formation of a field for markets; Conclusion; Works cited; 10: Neil Fligstein's concept of organizational fields, economic processes and dynamics, and their significance for building Russian markets; Fields and innovation; Fields and innovation in the global economy; The state as a system of fields; The politics of market rules and contemporary Russian reality.

Property rights; Governance structures and control of competition; Rules of exchange and conditions for transactions; Conceptions of control-hierarchies and status ordering; Conclusion; Works cited; 11: Economic theory and a constant worry across time: Institutional failures in the development of theories of inflation; The problem of inflation in the field of Russian economics; Discussions of the causes of inflation in Russia monetarists versus non-monetarists; Inflation, distributional conflicts, and field theory; Cyclical dynamics of inflation and distributional conflicts in the Russian economy.

Conclusion; Works cited; 12: Fields of Russian finance: State versus market; Fields and markets; Fields and Russian financial institutions; Works cited; 13: Fields in flux: Post-socialist reorganization of property and power; Fields and economic restructuring; Legacies and economic orders from habitus and fields to groups and clans; Red directors and defensive FPGs versus new capitalists and financial FPGs; Rise of the red directors and defensive FPGs; A competing field and empire: Financial elites and financial FPGs; The state strikes back: State cadres and state-centered FPGs topple the oligarchs.

Conclusion; Works cited; 14: Structure in Bourdieu's fields and realities of contemporary Russia; Fields and Russian post-socialism; Features of Russian fields and the field of power; Fields, the state. and the nature of power; Ways forward; Works cited.

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