"An engaging and superbly researched book. . . . I highly recommend this book to academic readers in Russian and East European history, media studies, and cultural studies."—Volsha Isakava, H-Net Reviews
“This engagingly written book will be of great interest to those interested in late socialism (inside and outside the USSR), and media more generally. It intersects with conversations about late socialism, the role of intellectuals in the USSR, youth, media technology, celebrity, class, cultural politics, and the question of political legitimacy in authoritarian regimes.” —Diane Koenker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“An impressive, original new history of the most prominent ‘public sphere’ of the late Soviet period. The scholarship is immaculate. I consider this the most insightful study yet produced of Soviet culture in the purportedly grey period of 1968-85.” —Stephen Lovell, King’s College London
"Evans handles matters of reception and production with great intelligence, theoretical sophistication and admirable clarity. Her rigorous research in Soviet-era archives deeply enriches our understanding of what seemed to outsiders to be the most boring and conservative of Soviet media. She has found a series of sweet spots between producers and consumers for which the best of cultural studies has always striven. This path-breaking book is a must-read for students at all levels in a wide range of disciplines."--Robert Edelman, University of California, San Diego
“This book will resonate with anyone interested in both the history of mass communications and late state socialism.” —Lewis Siegelbaum, Jack and Margaret Sweet Professor of History at Michigan State University
"In exhuming 1970’s Soviet television, Christine Evans makes a fascinating discovery. Both the experimentalism of Gorbachev’s era and the neo-rigidity of Putin’s got their start under, yes, Leonid Brezhnev. Tocqueville told us this is how revolutions—and counter-revolutions—work, but Evans brings his insight to life. A subtle, illuminating, entertaining book.”—Stephen Sestanovich, author of Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama
“This engagingly written book will be of great interest to those interested in late socialism (inside and outside the USSR), and media more generally. It intersects with conversations about late socialism, the role of intellectuals in the USSR, youth, media technology, celebrity, class, cultural politics, and the question of political legitimacy in authoritarian regimes.” —Diane Koenker, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
~Diane Koenker
“An impressive, original new history of the most prominent ‘public sphere’ of the late Soviet period. The scholarship is immaculate. I consider this the most insightful study yet produced of Soviet culture in the purportedly grey period of 1968-85.” —Stephen Lovell, King’s College London
~Stephen Lovell
"Evans handles matters of reception and production with great intelligence, theoretical sophistication and admirable clarity. Her rigorous research in Soviet-era archives deeply enriches our understanding of what seemed to outsiders to be the most boring and conservative of Soviet media. She has found a series of sweet spots between producers and consumers for which the best of cultural studies has always striven. This path-breaking book is a must-read for students at all levels in a wide range of disciplines."--Robert Edelman, University of California, San Diego
~Robert Edelman
“This book will resonate with anyone interested in both the history of mass communications and late state socialism.” —Lewis Siegelbaum, Jack and Margaret Sweet Professor of History at Michigan State University
~Lewis Siegelbaum
"In exhuming 1970’s Soviet television, Christine Evans makes a fascinating discovery. Both the experimentalism of Gorbachev’s era and the neo-rigidity of Putin’s got their start under, yes, Leonid Brezhnev. Tocqueville told us this is how revolutions—and counter-revolutions—work, but Evans brings his insight to life. A subtle, illuminating, entertaining book.”—Stephen Sestanovich, author of Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama
~Stephen Sestanovich