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Klappentext "Revolutionary Passage" is a cultural, social, and political history of Russia during its critical period of transformation at the end of the twentieth century. Marc Garcelon traces the history of "perestroika" and the rise of Vladimir Putin, arguing that the pressure Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms put on the Soviet system gave birth to movements for democratic change. He also shows that the very political arrangements that prompted the fall of Communism also killed hopes for subsequent reform. At the turning point of this political revolution stood Democratic Russia, or "DemRossiia," the principal organization of the Russian democratic movement that helped to dismantle the Soviet system and force the Soviet leadership to change course. However, as post-Soviet Russia committed itself to globalization and U.S.-style economic reforms, the country directed itself away from the Democratic reforms called for by organizations like "DemRossiia," and such groups collapsed. "Revolutionary Passage" provides a close examination of the "DemRossiia." Garcelon deftly illuminates the rise and decline of this organization, and how the processes of revolutionary change impacted both Russia and the world. Zusammenfassung Provides a cultural, social, and political history of Russia from 1985 to 2000. This book examines the DemRossiia movement, and argues that it helped to dismantle the soviet system, and was also post-soviet Russia's first victim as the country realigned itself with external forces and internal forces. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Passages; One: The Specialist Rebellion in Moscow and the Genesis of a Revolutionary Situation; Two: The Rise of Democratic Russia; Three: Democrats on the Offensive; Four: August 1991 and the Decline of Russia's Democratic Movement; Five: Interregnum