The Long Road to Freedom: Russia and Glasnost

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This book deals with the new political style and mood which have emerged in the Soviet Union since Gorbachev's rise to power. Laqueur explains the origins of glasnost against the background of Russian and Soviet history and shows how, as a result of glasnost, much of our knowledge on the state of the Soviet Union had to be reconsidered. He discusses the impact of glasnost on Soviet cultural life, the economy, and foreign policy; the polarization of public opinion; the open debates inside the Soviet Union on burning social problems; and the emergence of a new influential "Russian party." He concludes with the likely future trends and developments. ISBN 0-684-19030-3: $21.95.

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The long road to freedom: Russia and Glasnost

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Written by a distinguished scholar of German and Russian history, this is a major contribution to the swelling flood of books on Gorbachev's Soviet Union. It is based on wide reading, many Soviet ... Vollständige Rezension lesen

Inhalt

A Monologue in Moscow
1
Stagnation
14
The Rise of Gorbachev
36
Urheberrecht

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Über den Autor (1989)

Walter Louis Laqueur was born in Breslau, Germany on May 26, 1921. At the age of 17, he fled just a few days before Kristallnacht and found his way to Palestine, where he was known as Ze'ev. He worked briefly on a kibbutz before moving to Jerusalem, where he spent a year enrolled in the Hebrew University and covered the Middle East as a journalist. In 1955, he moved to London, where he was a founder and editor of The Journal of Contemporary History and a founder of Survey, a foreign affairs journal. From 1965 to 1994 he was director of the Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide, a leading archive in London. He became a scholar of the Holocaust, the collapse of the Soviet Union, European decline, the Middle East conflict, and global terrorism. He wrote numerous books including A History of Zionism, A History of Terrorism, The Terrible Secret, Putinism: Russia and Its Future with the West, and The Future of Terrorism: ISIS, Al Qaeda, and the Alt-Right written with Christopher Wall. His memoirs included Thursday's Child Has Far to Go; Worlds Ago; Best of Times, Worst of Times; and Reflections of a Veteran Pessimist. He was also the editor of The Holocaust Encyclopedia. He died on September 30, 2018 at the age of 97.

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