The Glasnost Papers
Voices On Reform From Moscow
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- €45.99
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- €45.99
Publisher Description
This unique compendium of Soviet thought and dialogue introduces Western readers to the broad range of current debates in the Soviet Union concerning the past, present, and future of the country and its people. Andrei Melville, the Soviet academic who spearheaded this work, is convinced that Mikhail Gorbachev's initiatives have led his country to the brink of a domestic transformation, one that will lead to an entirely new stage of development. Melville chronicles the societal ills— repression, crime, and apathy—and the structural flaws—corruption, a stagnant economy, a monolithic bureaucracy, a stifled flow of information—that have undermined the foundations of the existing system. In response to this crisis, Gorbachev conceived of the idea of perestroika— a program for the revolutionary restructuring of the whole of society, a wrenching process that has led to intense conflicts and strong disagreements between the guardians of the old and the proponents of the new. This book presents all facets of the debate, drawing on articles and letters extracted from dozens of major Soviet periodicals, including statements by political analysts, economists, historians, journalists, and writers, interspersed with excerpts from readers' letters published in the media. The extracts are placed in context by original essays that focus on the themes underlying all discussion of the implications of reform. The book paints a rich portrait of the diversity of opinions— from reformist to conservative—expressed in the public debates unleashed by glasnost.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
There is now open public debate in the Soviet Union on such topics as the arms race, the role of the military in society, individual rights, emigration, the economy and the Soviet presence in Afghanistan. Samizdat, no longer criminal, is growing closer to respectable self-publishing. The social and political ferment is captured in a compendium of articles excerpted from mainstream Soviet newspapers and journals, combined with essays, readers' letters and unifying commentaries by Melville, vice-president of the Soviet Peace Committee, and Lapidus, political scientist at UC-Berkeley. While contributors sometimes raise crucial issues only to retreat into timid or inconclusive formulations, this collage, though not well-organized, is a historic document. Revealing the novelty of the present social-political scene in the U.S.S.R., it is also a distillation of the broad-based activity shaping a ``revolution from below.''