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Alternative Pasts, Future Alternatives?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Abstract
Georgi Derluguian writes that Cohen’s exposition of the alternatives facing Gorbachev as reformer misses key elements that would give his analysis a firm disciplinary foundation: the social mechanisms involved in formulating and spreading competing discourses, the structural coalescence of potentially contentious groups and their actual mobilizing, the institutionalization of political gains, elite and oppositional brokerage, geopolitical configuration, and shifts in economic flows. He calls for a more rigorous analysis that would incorporate these elements, and he illustrates his method by sketching a number of key nodal points in the history of the USSR that would allow scholars to examine counterfactual, alternative pasts.
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2004
References
The epigraph is taken from Giovanni Arrighi, Terence Hopkins, and Immanuel Wallerstein, "1989: The Continuation of 1968," in George Katsiaficas, ed., After the Fall: 1989 and the Future of Freedom (New York, 2001), 43. Note that this essay was originally circulated in July 1992.
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