How Empires Die: The Soviet Union — Empire That Believed Its Own Lies

Prijzen vanaf
12,05

Uitgelicht

VERGELIJK ALLE AANBIEDERS (3)

Beschrijving

Bol How Empires Die: The Soviet Union - The Empire That Believed Its Own LiesThe Soviet Union achieved what many thought impossible.In less than a generation, it transformed itself from a largely agrarian society into a global superpower. It defeated Nazi Germany, launched the first satellite into space, sent the first human into orbit, and projected influence across much of the world. Millions believed they were building a new civilization that would surpass capitalism and reshape history.Yet beneath the triumphs lay a dangerous flaw.The Soviet system depended not merely on controlling people, but on controlling information. Failures were hidden. Statistics were manipulated. Bad news was punished. Leaders increasingly received the reports they wanted to hear rather than the reality they needed to understand. Over time, propaganda ceased to deceive only the public it began to deceive the state itself.In How Empires Die: The Soviet Union - The Empire That Believed Its Own Lies, Anthony Quinn traces the extraordinary rise and unexpected collapse of one of history's most powerful empires. From the Bolshevik Revolution and Stalin's industrialization drives to Sputnik, Chernobyl, Afghanistan, and the final dissolution of the USSR, this book reveals how a system built on managed truth gradually lost its ability to recognize reality.Discover: - How revolutionary idealism created genuine popular belief- Why rapid industrialization made the USSR a superpower- How propaganda and censorship became institutional habits- Why shortages persisted despite spectacular achievements- How bureaucratic incentives encouraged deception at every level- The role of Chernobyl, Afghanistan, and glasnost in exposing systemic weaknesses- Why the Soviet Union collapsed far more quickly than most observers expectedCombining political history, economics, military affairs, ideology, and human experience, The Empire That Believed Its Own Lies explores one of history's greatest paradoxes: The Soviet Union was strong enough to reach space.But not honest enough to save itself.

Vergelijk aanbieders (3)

Shop
Prijs
Verzendkosten
Totale prijs
12,05
Gratis
12,05
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
12,05
Gratis
12,05
Naar shop
Gratis Shipping Costs
12,50
2,99
15,49
Naar shop
2,99 Shipping Costs
Beschrijving (2)
Bol

How Empires Die: The Soviet Union - The Empire That Believed Its Own LiesThe Soviet Union achieved what many thought impossible.In less than a generation, it transformed itself from a largely agrarian society into a global superpower. It defeated Nazi Germany, launched the first satellite into space, sent the first human into orbit, and projected influence across much of the world. Millions believed they were building a new civilization that would surpass capitalism and reshape history.Yet beneath the triumphs lay a dangerous flaw.The Soviet system depended not merely on controlling people, but on controlling information. Failures were hidden. Statistics were manipulated. Bad news was punished. Leaders increasingly received the reports they wanted to hear rather than the reality they needed to understand. Over time, propaganda ceased to deceive only the public it began to deceive the state itself.In How Empires Die: The Soviet Union - The Empire That Believed Its Own Lies, Anthony Quinn traces the extraordinary rise and unexpected collapse of one of history's most powerful empires. From the Bolshevik Revolution and Stalin's industrialization drives to Sputnik, Chernobyl, Afghanistan, and the final dissolution of the USSR, this book reveals how a system built on managed truth gradually lost its ability to recognize reality.Discover: - How revolutionary idealism created genuine popular belief- Why rapid industrialization made the USSR a superpower- How propaganda and censorship became institutional habits- Why shortages persisted despite spectacular achievements- How bureaucratic incentives encouraged deception at every level- The role of Chernobyl, Afghanistan, and glasnost in exposing systemic weaknesses- Why the Soviet Union collapsed far more quickly than most observers expectedCombining political history, economics, military affairs, ideology, and human experience, The Empire That Believed Its Own Lies explores one of history's greatest paradoxes: The Soviet Union was strong enough to reach space.But not honest enough to save itself.

Amazon

Pagina's: 214, Paperback, Independently published


Productspecificaties

Merk Independently Published
EAN
  • 9798180915603
Maat


Prijshistorie

* Prijshistorie bevat geen data van Amazon, Amazon Marketplace.

Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op:

Uitgelichte Keuze
12,05
Naar shop