Resurrection: The Struggle for a New RussiaResurrection plunges the reader directly into the thick of events so that one all but feels Yeltsin's breath upon one's face - he is drunk one day, in command the next, as volatile as the fragmented country he tries to lead. Remnick's new Russia springs to life through vivid portraits of its players: the half-Jewish anti-Semite Zhirinovsky, "a hater, a crank, a nut"; the young (and purged) economist Yegor Gaidar, champion of "shock therapy" and market reform; Vladimir Gusinsky, Russia's Citizen Kane ("a first-generation capitalist living in a jungle world with few rules or restraints"); Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who returned from a twenty-year exile to find a country freed from communism but still steeped in misery - and nostalgia. These portraits emerge against a background dominated by the war in Chechnya, which Remnick visits in a bloody and unforgettable chapter, and a Moscow in turbulent transition. |
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Page 173
... less pretentious , no less interested in self - aggrandizement , than the old ones . There is something unseemly about the spectacle of lifelong apparatchiks like Yeltsin and Luzhkov , once so faithful to the Leninist faith , now acting ...
... less pretentious , no less interested in self - aggrandizement , than the old ones . There is something unseemly about the spectacle of lifelong apparatchiks like Yeltsin and Luzhkov , once so faithful to the Leninist faith , now acting ...
Page 268
... less defiant in exile than they had been in battle against the czars ' generals . In the third volume of The Gulag Archi- pelago , Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn recalls seeing , while he himself was living in exile , that the Chechens were the ...
... less defiant in exile than they had been in battle against the czars ' generals . In the third volume of The Gulag Archi- pelago , Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn recalls seeing , while he himself was living in exile , that the Chechens were the ...
Page 299
... less democratic , more or less market - oriented — that is , more or less like the United States , West- ern Europe , Japan . Russia , in other words , had not only abandoned the Marxism- Leninism of the twentieth century , but also the ...
... less democratic , more or less market - oriented — that is , more or less like the United States , West- ern Europe , Japan . Russia , in other words , had not only abandoned the Marxism- Leninism of the twentieth century , but also the ...
Contents
The Lost Empire | 3 |
The October Revolution | 37 |
The Great Dictator | 84 |
Copyright | |
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Aleksandr Aleksandr Korzhakov Aleksandr Yakovlev American Anatoly Andrei army asked began Belarus Boris Boris Yeltsin Brezhnev Burbulis called campaign Chechen Chechnya Chernomyrdin Chubais collapse Communist Party coup dacha democracy democratic deputy Dudayev Duma early economic elections forces foreign former Gaidar Gazprom Gennady Gennady Zyuganov Gorbachev Grachev Grozny Gulag Gusinsky intellectual journalists Khasbulatov Kiselyov Korzhakov Kozyrev Kremlin Kryuchkov language leaders Lebed Lenin liberal Listyev lived look Luzhkov Malashenko Mayerbek Mikhail military minister Moscow nationalist newspaper Nikolai Ostankino parliament percent perestroika police Politburo political politicians president Prigov Prokhanov Red Wheel reform regime Revolution Russia's Choice Russian Rutskoi Sergei Sevodnya Solzhenitsyn Soviet Union Stalin streets talk television things thousand tion told troops Ukraine victory Viktor Vladimir Vladimir Gusinsky vote wanted West Western White House writer wrote Yakovlev Yegor Yegor Gaidar Yeltsin Yuri Zhirinovsky Zyuganov