How could the West have better prepared for the fall of
communism and gained a clearer picture of Russia's new political
landscape? By cultivating an awareness, Nicolai Petro argues, of
the deep democratic aspirations of the Russian people since
Muscovite times. Petro traces the long history of those
aspirations, recovering for us an understanding crucial to our
formation of successful foreign policy toward Russia.
Expanding the traditional definition of political culture from
single thread to continuous historical tapestry, Petro illuminates
a reality previously lost to even the most rigorous Sovietology:
the fragility of communism. He portrays an abiding "alternative
political culture" that tells us Russia indeed possesses a
democratic tradition on which its contemporary democracy rests.
Petro's analysis includes many surprising and incisive
observations. In a look at the Russian Orthodox Church, he traces
its long history of support for opposition sentiment during both
tsarist and Soviet times and its support for democracy today. He
also explores the character and power of contemporary Russian
nationalism and traces its origins to the neo-Slavophile national
identity that took its shape as a challenge to Bolshevik
oppression. Delineating Russia's postcommunist political parties,
the author reveals their roots in prerevolutionary times and
explains how this continuity makes Russian political aspirations
far more predictable than is commonly assumed.
Awakening us to Russia's historical involvement in the
democratic quest that lies at the heart of Western values, Petro
opens a path for a more meaningful, more productive understanding
of modern Russia.
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