Vodka Politics

Vodka Politics

Sense existències ara
Rep-lo a casa en una setmana per Missatger o Eco Enviament*Sobre el libro Vodka Politics de Mark Schrad publicado por Oxford al 2014:
Alcohol, Autocracy, and the Secret History of the Russian StateRussia is justly famous for its vodka. Today, the Russian average drinking man consumes 180 bottles of vodka a year, nearly half a bottle a day. But few people realize the enormous - and enormously destructive - role vodka has played in Russian politics.
In Vodka Politics, Mark Schrad reveals that almost every Russian ruler has utilized alcohol to strengthen his governing power and that virtually every major event in Russian history has been tinged with alcohol. The Tsars used alcohol to dampen dissent and exert control over their courts, while the government´s monopoly over its sale has provided a crucial revenue stream for centuries.
In one of the book´s many remarkable insights, Schrad shows how Tsar Nicholas II´s decision to ban alcohol in 1914 contributed to the 1917 revolution. After taking power, Stalin lifted the ban and once again used mandatory drinking binges to keep his subordinates divided, fearful, confused, and off balance. On such occasions, a drunken Khrushchev routinely pushed the drunken Soviet Deputy Defense Commissar Grigory Kulik into a nearby pond. Under Gorbachev the pendulum swung back the other way, but his crackdown on alcohol consumption in the 1980s backfired, exacerbating the Soviets´ fiscal crisis and hastening the 1991 collapse. Today, chronic alcoholism has created a massive health crisis, and life expectancies for men have fallen to an alarmingly low 59 as a consequence. Schrad argues that Russia´s storied addiction to vodka is not simply a social problem, but a symptom of a deeper sickness - autocracy. Indeed, Schrad shows that alcoholism and autocracy have gone hand-in-hand throughout Russian history.
Drawing upon remarkable archival evidence and filled with colorful anecdotes of the enforced drunkenness Russian leaders imposed on their courts, Vodka Politics offers a wholly new way of understanding Russian political history.
El llibre Vodka Politics de Mark Schrad pertany a la matèria
Veure altres ressenyes de Història
Ressenya
Richard Cockett
Viena
La escritura de Cockett opera con un ingenio y un humor finísimo a la hora de realizar este ajuste de cuentas, sin negar todas las luces y sombras que pudieron dar lugar a este proceso de moderniza...

Ressenya
Bernd Brunner
Vivir en horizontal
La Historia cuenta con un estigma que, durante muchos años, se ha encargado de alimentar: es aburrida. La sucesión de nombres, fechas y eventos ha sido el método de estudio más habitual hasta hace ...

Ressenya
Xavier Pla
Un cor furtiu. Vida de Josep Pla
Xavier Pla, amb aquesta gran biografia, ens invita a deixar enrere el personatge i endinsar-nos en la personalitat de Josep Pla. Amb un munt d’anys investigant fonts i documents personals en els ar...

Ressenya
David Graeber
Ilustración pirata
David Graeber al inicio de este ensayo, en el que busca mostrar como la Ilustración no fue un movimiento intelectual que apareció de la nada en el centro de Europa, ocupando salones y orquestando t...
