There Is No Freedom Without Bread!: 1989 and the Civil War That Brought Down CommunismThe conventional story of the end of the cold war focuses on the geopolitical power struggle between the United States and the USSR: Ronald Reagan waged an aggressive campaign against communism, outspent the USSR, and forced Mikhail Gorbachev to "tear down this wall." In There Is No Freedom Without Bread!, a daring revisionist account of that seminal year, the Russian-born historian Constantine Pleshakov proposes a very different interpretation. The revolutions that took place during this momentous year were infinitely more complex than the archetypal image of the "good" masses overthrowing the "bad" puppet regimes of the Soviet empire. Politicking, tensions between Moscow and local communist governments, compromise between the revolutionary leaders and the communist old-timers, and the will and anger of the people—all had a profound influence in shaping the revolutions as multifaceted movements that brought about one of the greatest transformations in history. In a dramatic narrative culminating in a close examination of the whirlwind year, Pleshakov challenges the received wisdom and argues that 1989 was as much about national civil wars and internal struggles for power as it was about the Eastern Europeans throwing off the yoke of Moscow. |
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THERE IS NO FREEDOM WITHOUT BREAD!: 1989 and the Civil War that Brought Down Communism
Recenzja użytkownika - KirkusPleshakov (History/Mount Holyoke Coll.; Stalin's Folly: The Tragic First Ten Days of WWII on the Eastern Front, 2006, etc.) recounts the slow dismantling of Communism in Eastern Europe, a process that ... Przeczytaj pełną recenzję
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There Is No Freedom Without Bread!: 1989 and the Civil War That Brought Down ... Constantine Pleshakov Podgląd niedostępny - 2010 |
There Is No Freedom Without Bread!: 1989 and the Civil War That Brought Down ... Constantine Pleshakov Podgląd niedostępny - 2009 |
