9780199311231-0199311234-Soviet Baby Boomers: An Oral History of Russia's Cold War Generation (Oxford Oral History Series)

Soviet Baby Boomers: An Oral History of Russia's Cold War Generation (Oxford Oral History Series)

ISBN-13: 9780199311231
ISBN-10: 0199311234
Edition: Reprint
Author: Donald J. Raleigh
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback 436 pages
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ISBN-13: 9780199311231
ISBN-10: 0199311234
Edition: Reprint
Author: Donald J. Raleigh
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback 436 pages

Summary

Soviet Baby Boomers: An Oral History of Russia's Cold War Generation (Oxford Oral History Series) (ISBN-13: 9780199311231 and ISBN-10: 0199311234), written by authors Donald J. Raleigh, was published by Oxford University Press in 2013. With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Soviet Baby Boomers: An Oral History of Russia's Cold War Generation (Oxford Oral History Series) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Donald Raleigh's Soviet Baby Boomers traces the collapse of the Soviet Union and the transformation of Russia into a modern, highly literate, urban society through the fascinating life stories of the country's first post-World War II, Cold War generation.

For this book, Raleigh has interviewed sixty 1967 graduates of two "magnet" secondary schools that offered intensive instruction in English, one in Moscow and one in provincial Saratov. Part of the generation that began school the year the country launched Sputnik into space, they grew up during the Cold War, but in a Soviet Union increasingly distanced from the excesses of Stalinism. In this post-Stalin era, the Soviet leadership dismantled the Gulag, ruled without terror, promoted consumerism, and began to open itself to an outside world still fearful of Communism. Raleigh is one of the first scholars of post-1945 Soviet history to draw extensively on oral history, a particularly useful approach in studying a country where the boundaries between public and private life remained porous and the state sought to peer into every corner of people's lives. During and after the dissolution of the USSR, Russian citizens began openly talking about their past, trying to make sense of it, and Raleigh has made the most of this new forthrightness. He has created an extraordinarily rich composite narrative and embedded it in larger historical narratives of Cold War, de-Stalinization, "overtaking" America, opening up to the outside world, economic stagnation, dissent, emigration, the transition to a market economy, the transformation of class, ethnic, and gender relations, and globalization.

Including rare photographs of daily life in Cold War Russia, Soviet Baby Boomers offers an intimate portrait of a generation that has remained largely faceless until now.

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