Glasnost: This term, "гласность," is Russian for "openness" or "publicity." It was a policy introduced by Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s as part of his reforms in the Soviet Union, aiming to increase transparency and freedom of information.
Sasha froze. “What if they…?”
Title: Russian Teens during Glasnost: A Era of Social and Cultural Transformation Russian.Teens.3.Glasnost.Teens
The Defining Artifact: Little Vera (Malyenikaya Vera) is the canonical text. Vera, a 17-year-old in a provincial Soviet town, drinks, smokes, has sex, and finally stabs her father. The film ends not with a political rally, but with a close-up of her empty, deadened eyes. That is Glasnost Teen Part 3. Glasnost : This term, "гласность," is Russian for
Cultural and Social Habits
In many ways, the Russian teens of Glasnost were the first truly modern Russian citizens: cynical about power, hungry for authenticity, and aware that the world is not black-and-red but a thousand shades of gray. They traded their pioneer scarves for leather jackets, their school debates about the Party Congress for arguments about democracy and market economics, and their certainties for questions. The Third Wave of Glasnost teens did not build the new Russia—the oligarchs and political hacks of the 1990s did that. But they were the ones who, for one brief, brilliant, terrifying moment, believed that a teenager’s opinion could matter. And for that belief, they were both the triumph and the tragedy of Gorbachev’s great experiment. Vera, a 17-year-old in a provincial Soviet town,
The Era of Glasnost: