More Pages: Union Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


Solid piece of work

Back to the USSR

Russian Political Systems explored.I give this a must read rating. Remembering that it deals mostly with the political system of Russia.
Jimmy


clear, well-informed and entertaining

Excellent accountAt the center of this book are gripping accounts of Soviet heroism in Afghanistan. These must be read by any serious student of recent military history and will probably hold special interest for any veteran. There are more than a few very moving stories of (sometimes suicidal) valor in these pages.
The last chapters deal with the tragedy of a proud and patriotic army struggling in vain against the ethnic separatism and political incompetence that led to the break up of the USSR. The section on the August 1991 "coup" and its aftermath is especially interesting. Immediate post-Soviet history is touched on, as well, but this book was written before the October '93 Parliament massacre or the '94 Chechen War.
While most of this book deals with the Airborne and Air Assault forces, there is also some great info on the Spetsnaz units, which have been so misunderstood and blown out of proportion in many popular Western accounts.
Among the many Soviet military personalities that appear thoughout this book is Alexander Lebed. An interesting portrait of the man before he left the army for politics, covering his service in Afghanistan through his command in post-Soviet Moldavia.
Also try _Inside the Blue Berets: A Combat History of the Soviet & Russian Airborne Forces_, by Steven Zaloga, for further reading.


A very much longed-for book on contemporary Russian LiteratuIt would have been good, though, if Prof. Shneidman would be so kind as to indicate where the stress in pronunciation of the Russian names would fall, which would be good at least for those who are not native speakers of Russian.
Anyhow, this book raises the reader's interest to keep in touch with the further develeopment of Russian contemporary literature by reading Russian literary journals.


Varieties of Russian Messianism Exploredimportant recurring features in Russian nationalist thought: the idea of a special mission of the
Russian people for Europe, Eurasia, or even the whole world. He starts with a short
comparative overview of the international varieties of messianism, and then proceeds to the
origins of Russian messianism in the late fourteenth century when "the monasteries developed
the ideological claim that Muscovy and her Grand Dukes were chosen to represent the climax
of Christian history" (p.11). A more elaborate version of this idea became later known under the
heading of Moscow as the "Third Rome".
In his survey, Duncan succeeds in comparing all the different permutations of, and in providing
a useful taxonomic scheme for, Russian messianism. For example, he distinguishes between
a state-oriented messianism inspired by the idea of Moscow's domination of other peoples (a
messianism he classifies as "nationalist"), and a people-oriented messianism linked with the
idea of the Russian people as being a model for other nations to follow (which he categorizes
as "universalist messianism"; p.3). His appraisal is especially helpful in differentiating between
19th-century Russian revolutionary and Leninist messianism, on the one side, and Stalinist
messianism, on the other.
Duncan's study is to be singled out as a major contribution to the field of comparative
nationalism studies, and a unique addition to the study of Russian intellectual and political
history. Moreover, it provides perhaps the most extensive bibliography on Russian nationalism
assembled so far. It will thus be of great value to students and advanced researchers alike.


The only professional book on the subject

a must have book for breeders of Russian dogs or cats

The 20s weren't really this dullThere are some good selections here, like "Mahogony", and a couple short ones from Zoschenko. But the good ones are not incredible and will leave one thinking that literature in NEP Russia was decadent and dull.
It wasn't. Read Pilnyak's The Naked Year, Ginsburg's translation of We, Olesha's Envy, or even, believe it or not, Gladkov's Cement. Those are all works worth a discerning reader's time.
One final comment. Robert Maguire's introduction is a good one, but fails to capture the true dynamic between politics and literature that was occuring in the 1920s. The struggle in the Bolshevik party between "intellectuals" like Trotsky and Lunacharsky and pedestrians like Stalin was mirrored in literature. Trotsky himself wrote several articles about literature, championing a diversity of forms and claiming that the bourgeois heritage must not be discarded. He lost, of course, and so did his view on literature. Maguire unfortunately only brushes the surface of that struggle.
Excellent Russian Literature Anthology