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Since 1989 Panorama of Russia has specialized in academic and reference publications from the Russian Federation and the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Moscow: Voenizdat, 1999 328 p Serie: Redkaia Kniga Hardcover. 14 x 21 cm ISBN: 5203018871 Language: Russian
This book by the leading right-wing writer, critic and philosopher V.V. Kozhinov (1930- 2001) is written in commemoration of the 55th anniversary of the Soviet victory in the Second World War and the 200th anniversary of Pushkin’s birth. Kozhinov views the Russian war of 1941-1945 as an event of a far-reaching geopolitical significance born out of a confrontation between Europe as a whole, on the one hand, and the USSR-Russia, on the other He offers his own interpretation of various episodes of the Second World War and views The Great Terror of 1937 as Stalin’s noble single-handed endeavor to restore the role of the state in the face of dangerous growth of the Party. While evaluating different critiques of Pushkin’s works, the author attributes deep religious and patriotic sentiments to the poet.