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The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Empire describes and explains the creation, maintenance and eventual demise of the Soviet regime across post-1945 Eastern Europe. Balancing internal factors such as resilient nationalism against external factors such as America's acceleration of the arms race, Raymond Pearson sets the so-called 'Soviet Empire' within the broader context of global imperialism and decolonisation. Full coverage is also given to the dramatic episodes of Eastern Europe dissent and the chequered career of the ostensibly monolithic 'Soviet Empire'.This revised and updated second edition features an expanded final chapter on the 'Last Empire', assessing not only its patent strengths and hidden weaknesses, but also its much publicised vices and rarely acknowledged virtues. New documentation that has only become available in the last five years has been incorporated to provide a fuller retrospective historical judgement on the Soviet regime across Eastern Europe.
RAYMOND PEARSON is Professor of Modern European History at the University of Ulster. He has written widely on nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russia and Eastern Europe.
Series Editors' PrefaceAuthor's Preface to Second EditionChronologyGlossaryMapsYalta 1945: Liberation or Occupation?Belgrade 1948: Cold War EmpireBudapest 1956: Thaw and RefreezePrague 1968: Spring and FallGdansk 1980: Stagnation to SolidarityBerlin 1989: Decolonisation of the Outer EmpireMoscow 1991: Disintegration of the Inner EmpireThe Last Empire?BibliographyIndex.