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Putin’s Russia / Anna Politkovskaya ; translated from the Russian by Arch Tait.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Harvill Press, 2004.Description: 301 p. ; 20 cmISBN:
  • 1843430509
Uniform titles:
  • Putinskai͡a Rossii͡a. English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 320.947   22
Summary: Former KGB spy Vladimir Putin, named Prime Minister of Russia in 1999 and, one year later, President, successfully marketed himself as an enlightened leader with both feet planted firmly on the Eastern borders of Europe. Indeed he became, for a period, something of a media darling in the West. Anti-establishment journalist and human-rights activist Anna Politkovskaya disagreed strenuously with this point of view. In Putin's Russia, she trains her steely gaze on Putin 'without the rapture'. From her privileged vantage-point at the heart of Russian current affairs, Politkovskaya reports from behind the scenes, dismantling both Putin the man and Putin the brand name, arguing that he is a power-hungry product of his own history in the security forces and so unable to prevent himself from stifling dissent and other civil liberties at every turn.Summary: After centuries of living under tyrants, Politkovskaya argues, this is not what contemporary Russians want. The book is, however, not simply a biography or an analysis of Putin's presidency. Politkovskaya's writing is known for its humanity and its passion, and her focus is on individual human beings and their stories. 'My book is jottings made on the margins of life in Russia. For the time being, I cannot analyse that existence. I'm just living and noting what I see.' So her readers are treated to an expose of mafia dealings and scandals in the provinces, of corruption in the military and the judiciary, of the decline of the dissident intelligentsia and concomitant rise of street traders, and of the truth behind the Moscow theatre siege. Other shocking stories fill out an intimate portrait of nascent civil institutions being subverted under the unquestioning eyes of the West.Summary: Known by many as "Russia's lost moral conscience", Anna Politkovskaya is a special correspondent for the Russian newspaper Novaya gazeta. In 2000 she was awarded the prestigious Golden Pen Award by the Russian Union of Journalists for her outspoken coverage of the war in Chechnya. She was called in by the Russian government as a negotiator during the 2002 Moscow theatre siege by Chechen separatists.
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Former KGB spy Vladimir Putin, named Prime Minister of Russia in 1999 and, one year later, President, successfully marketed himself as an enlightened leader with both feet planted firmly on the Eastern borders of Europe. Indeed he became, for a period, something of a media darling in the West. Anti-establishment journalist and human-rights activist Anna Politkovskaya disagreed strenuously with this point of view. In Putin's Russia, she trains her steely gaze on Putin 'without the rapture'. From her privileged vantage-point at the heart of Russian current affairs, Politkovskaya reports from behind the scenes, dismantling both Putin the man and Putin the brand name, arguing that he is a power-hungry product of his own history in the security forces and so unable to prevent himself from stifling dissent and other civil liberties at every turn.

After centuries of living under tyrants, Politkovskaya argues, this is not what contemporary Russians want. The book is, however, not simply a biography or an analysis of Putin's presidency. Politkovskaya's writing is known for its humanity and its passion, and her focus is on individual human beings and their stories. 'My book is jottings made on the margins of life in Russia. For the time being, I cannot analyse that existence. I'm just living and noting what I see.' So her readers are treated to an expose of mafia dealings and scandals in the provinces, of corruption in the military and the judiciary, of the decline of the dissident intelligentsia and concomitant rise of street traders, and of the truth behind the Moscow theatre siege. Other shocking stories fill out an intimate portrait of nascent civil institutions being subverted under the unquestioning eyes of the West.

Known by many as "Russia's lost moral conscience", Anna Politkovskaya is a special correspondent for the Russian newspaper Novaya gazeta. In 2000 she was awarded the prestigious Golden Pen Award by the Russian Union of Journalists for her outspoken coverage of the war in Chechnya. She was called in by the Russian government as a negotiator during the 2002 Moscow theatre siege by Chechen separatists.

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