How to Survive Authoritarianism: A Russian's Phrasebook for Everyday Life in America
How to Survive Authoritarianism: A Russian's Phrasebook for Everyday Life in America
    How to Survive Authoritarianism: A Russian's Phrasebook for Everyday Life in America
How to Survive Authoritarianism: A Russian's Phrasebook for Everyday Life in America

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Learn what makes this product unique and why it’s right for you.

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America is not the first country to experience the stirring of tyranny; in Russia, it has been the law of the land for generations. Over the years, a vernacular of double-speak emerged, one that helped ordinary people make sense of how illiberalism takes shape and makes itself felt in daily life. It allowed them to talk about authoritarianism and to subvert it--with a healthy dose of humor and irony along the way.

In this edifying yet lighthearted glossary, two exiled dissidents share one hundred Russian idioms and turns of phrase, from "apparatchik" to "samizdat." Some, like "power vertical," give name to a hypercentralized form of government. Others are playful, like mnogohodovochka ("master plan"), used to deride bizarre, misguided state measures. Taken together, they make up the vocabulary we need to understand what is really taking place, and offer a roadmap to what might still lie ahead.




Contributor Bio:Kuznetsova, Maria
Maria Kuznetsova is a human rights expert and activist. She received a master of public policy from Harvard Kennedy School and is based in San Francisco.

Contributor Bio:Storyev, Dan
Dan Storyev is a researcher and writer. He received an MPhil from the University of Oxford.


Learn what makes this product unique and why it’s right for you.

Publisher Marketing:

America is not the first country to experience the stirring of tyranny; in Russia, it has been the law of the land for generations. Over the years, a vernacular of double-speak emerged, one that helped ordinary people make sense of how illiberalism takes shape and makes itself felt in daily life. It allowed them to talk about authoritarianism and to subvert it--with a healthy dose of humor and irony along the way.

In this edifying yet lighthearted glossary, two exiled dissidents share one hundred Russian idioms and turns of phrase, from "apparatchik" to "samizdat." Some, like "power vertical," give name to a hypercentralized form of government. Others are playful, like mnogohodovochka ("master plan"), used to deride bizarre, misguided state measures. Taken together, they make up the vocabulary we need to understand what is really taking place, and offer a roadmap to what might still lie ahead.




Contributor Bio:Kuznetsova, Maria
Maria Kuznetsova is a human rights expert and activist. She received a master of public policy from Harvard Kennedy School and is based in San Francisco.

Contributor Bio:Storyev, Dan
Dan Storyev is a researcher and writer. He received an MPhil from the University of Oxford.


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How to Survive Authoritarianism: A Russian's Phrasebook for Everyday Life in America

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