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Summary
Summary
A high-octane account of the politics and subterfuge of modern-day Russia
As 2011 came to a close, in what was a watershed moment, 100,000 took to Moscow's freezing streets to protest the election victory of United Russia - Vladimir Putin's party - amid widespread allegations of corruption and vote-rigging. A few months later, Pussy Riot hit headlines around the world when they were arrested following their anti-Putin demonstration in a Russian Orthodox cathedral. The vicious battle for Russia's soul continues to this day.
In the first book to take the reader straight to the beating heart of the opposition movement, journalist and long-time Moscow resident Marc Bennetts introduces a new generation of Russian dissidents, united by their hatred of Putin and his bid to silence all political adversaries. We meet a bustling cast of urban youth working to expose the injustices of the regime and a disjointed bunch of dissenters - from 'It Girl' hipsters to 21st-century socialists. Featuring rare interviews with everyone from Pussy Riot and top protest leaders to Kremlin insiders, Bennetts' compelling narrative is an astonishing journey through Russia's new protest movements.
Author Notes
Marc Bennetts is a British journalist who has lived in Moscow for fifteen years. He has reported for the Guardian and the New York Times, and is the author of Football Dynamo: Modern Russia and the People's Game.
Reviews (2)
Kirkus Review
Engagingly grim, frequently absurdist portrait of Vladimir Putin and the popular protests against him, which are gaining steam. Moscow-based British journalist Bennetts (Football Dynamo: Modern Russia and the People's Game, 2009, etc.) maintains a cool, even tone throughout these portraits of the Putin oligarchs, who are determined to keep power, and the leaders of the dissident movements aiming to oust them. Putin, the former security services chief anointed by outgoing Boris Yeltsin to succeed him as president in 2000, was received as a breath of fresh air by his Russian constituents when the country was reeling from the "shock therapy" of capitalism suddenly imposed after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Poverty and lawlessness plagued the nation, and Putin set about restoring order with strong-arm tactics like quelling the independent media, sabotaging the courts, siphoning oil dollars, appointing regional governors rather than holding elections and stifling breakaway republics. Gradually, Russians began to grow weary of his "sausages in exchange for freedom" approach to ruling the country. Heartened by the so-called Colour Revolutions that had prevailed in ex-Soviet republics from 2003 to 2005, the "Orange threat" challenged the pro-Putin right-wing youth movement, while Other Russia leader Eduard Limonov galvanized punks and skinheads into the street-wise NatsBol. However, with the election of heir apparent Dmitry Medvedev in 2008, the "scent of change" encouraged wider protest against authoritye.g., a local mother-turned-activist who saved the Khimki forest from highway construction and lawyer Alexei Navalny's grass-roots anti-corruption campaign. The clincher was Putin's naked comeback to the presidency, a wicked "trick" engineered with Medvedev and played on the Russian people, whose mood had darkened with the rigged 2012 presidential elections, making way for huge street demonstrations in a rare show of unity, from the New Left to more vociferous groups like Pussy Riot. Bennetts insightfully portrays a Russia on the cusp of popular revolt.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
British journalist Bennetts squarely, bravely tackles contemporary Russia, specifically, Vladimir Putin and his United Russia banditry. Westerners may have noted that Putin left and came back, but here's the electrifying story, filled with interviews with politicians and people on the street, quotes and statistics, and footnoted facts that make this book an eerie, bone-shaking, you-are-there expose. Some citizens long for the stability of communism; others watch state-controlled television and hope for the best. Yet intellectuals, hipsters, members of the punk-rock group Pussy Riot, and others, in particular, Alexei Navalny, have fought back against Putin's outright, untrammeled corruption, using social media to rally the masses, mostly city dwellers, into action, even though action against Putin often leads to trumped-up charges, imprisonment, and worse. Bennetts attends the marches and rallies, chases down the interviews, and writes with clarity and wryness about, ultimately, the historical willingness to seek a savior figure that will rescue Russia from itself.--Kinney, Eloise Copyright 2014 Booklist
Table of Contents
List of Main Characters | p. vii |
Prologue: One Day in December | p. xiii |
1 Putin's Pact | p. 1 |
2 Putin and his 'Sovereign Democracy' | p. 9 |
3 The 'Orange Threat' and the Early Dissenters | p. 30 |
4 Medvedev and the Scent of Change | p. 44 |
5 Navalny and the 'Crooks and Thieves' | p. 65 |
6 Castling at the Kremlin | p. 88 |
7 Polls and Protests | p. 96 |
8 Udaltsov and the New Left | p. 119 |
9 Pussy Riot vs the Kremlin | p. 130 |
10 Putin's Return | p. 153 |
11 Tightening the Screws | p. 177 |
12 Pussy Riot - The Verdict | p. 193 |
13 Dark Days | p. 207 |
14 Next Target - The New Left | p. 221 |
15 The People's Wrath | p. 235 |
16 End of the Line for Navalny? | p. 244 |
Epilogue: Dreams of Something More | p. 267 |
Notes | p. 273 |
Further Reading/Watching | p. 291 |
Index | p. 293 |
Acknowledgements | p. 301 |