Image for From Glasnost to the Internet

From Glasnost to the Internet : Russia's New Infosphere

See all formats and editions

The Soviet collapse of 1991 - the Great August liberation - demonstrated the total exhaustion of Marxist Leninist agitation and propaganda.

It was no longer possible to live on slogans. The failure of Soviet agitprop is also the failure of Soviet censorship the latter being a unique institution in anti-thought.

This volume analyzes the consequences of censorship, before tackling the media legislation of the Russian Federation and the dangers to the free flow of information emerging both within and outside the Russian Federation.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£80.99 Save 10.00%
RRP £89.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
0333670957 / 9780333670958
Hardback
09/12/1998
United Kingdom
English
256p.
22 cm
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Frank Ellis's monograph on the Soviet Russian writer, Vasily Grossman, "Vasily Grossman: The Genesis and Evolution of a Russian Heretic", was published in 1994.
Frank Ellis's monograph on the Soviet Russian writer, Vasily Grossman, "Vasily Grossman: The Genesis and Evolution of a Russian Heretic", was published in 1994. 1DVU Former Soviet Union, USSR (Europe), JFD Media studies, JFMD Ethical issues: censorship, JPVH2 Freedom of information & freedom of speech