Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience with Communications Technologies

Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience with Communications Technologies

by Gladys D. Ganley
Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience with Communications Technologies

Unglued Empire: The Soviet Experience with Communications Technologies

by Gladys D. Ganley

Hardcover

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Overview

. . .Ganley has marshaled an extrodinary range and volume of information and presents the story with bolth clarity and drama. Unglued Empire offers a gold mine of case-study data for scholars analyzing the interplay of politics and modern communication technology. . . -Technology and Culture

There is no doubt that the growing availability of television and its technology, which made it possible to report scenes instantly, did have an impact on the collapse of the Soviet Union. Mikhail Gorbachev decided that his country needed a dose of openness or Glasnost to modernize society and make the people more supportive of his efforts. In the end, more information about the outside world as well as the inside world helped to bring down the communist party and the Soviet government. This book documents this process, showing how the media's ready availability became such a divisive force in the Soviet Union. Instead of creating a more structured, rigid regime, it did just the opposite. The Soviet Union may well have collapsed of its own weight sooner or later, but there is no doubt that the media, technology and communications accelerated the process, a form of uskoreniie that Gorbachev never intended. Many of the events described in this study have application to other researchers and government officials. The study makes it possible to understand some of the new challenges that regimes wary of criticism will have to face in the future.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781567501971
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/01/1996
Series: Contemporary Studies in Comm Culture Info
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

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Table of Contents

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Background and Beginning of the Gorbachev Era
Glasnost and Perestroika, 1985-1989
Telephones and Facsimile Machines in the Soviet Union
Computers and Computer Networks
The Effects of Glasnost on the Soviet Print Media
Glasnost and Soviet Radio and Television
The events of 1990 and early 1991
The Soviet Press Law of 1990
Boris Yeltsin and Information Resources in the Power Struggle with Gorbachev
A Chill Falls Over Glasnost
The attempted coup of August 1991
Information Handling by the Coup Perpetrators
Personal and Mass Media and Boris Yeltsin
The Reaction of the Soviet Print Media
Reaction of the Soviet Electronic Media
Communications by Individuals and Various Groups During the Crisis
Foreign News Services During the Crisis
The Captive Gorbachev and Communications
The End of the Union
Bibliography of Books, Reports, and Jourbanal Articles

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