Comments and Analyses

Most recent Analysis on Russian Politics

From the New Yorker:

The Civil Archipelago

How far can the resistance to Vladimir Putin go?

by David Remnick December 19, 2011

"On the night of November 20th, two weeks before elections for the State Duma, Vladimir Putin set aside the cares of the Kremlin and went to the Olympic SportComplex for an ultimate-fighting match—a “no rules” heavyweight bout between a Cyclopean Russian named Feodor (the Last Emperor) Yemelianenko and a self-described anarchist from Olympia, Washington, named Jeff (the Snowman) Monson. The bout was broadcast nationally on Rossiya-2, one of the main state television channels. Putin, wearing a blue suit and no tie, was at ringside. He has always been eager to project the macho posture of a muzhik, a real man. He has had himself photographed riding horses bare-chested, tracking tigers, shooting a whale with a crossbow, piloting a firefighting jet, swimming a Siberian river, steering a Formula One race car, befriending Jean-Claude Van Damme, and riding with a motorcycle gang. Once, on national television, he tried to bend a frying pan with his bare hands. He did not quite succeed, but the effort was appreciated. And now ultimate fighting: the beery crowd of twenty thousand—some prosperous, some less so—were his own, Putin’s people (more)."

Contact

  • Interfaculty Institute for Central and Eastern Europe
  • University of Freiburg
  • Bd de Pérolles 90
  • 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland
  • iicee@unifr.ch

 

Visit our BLOG with background analyses and newspaper articles on Eastern Europe (in German and English)