In The Long Hangover, Shaun Walker presents a deeply reported, bottom-up explanation of Russia's resurgence under Putin. By cleverly exploiting the memory of the Soviet victory over fascism in World War II, Putin's regime has made ordinary Russians feel that their country is great again. Walker not only explains Putin's goals and the government's official manipulations of history, but also focuses on ordinary Russians and their motivations. He charts how Putin raised victory in WWII to the status of a national founding myth in the search for a unifying force to heal a divided country, and shows how dangerous the ramifications of this have been. This book explores why Russia, unlike Germany, has failed to come to terms with the darkest pages of its past: Stalin's purges, the Gulag, and the war deportations. The narrative roams from the corridors of the Kremlin to the wilds of the Gulags and the trenches of East Ukraine. It puts the annexation of Crimea and the newly assertive Russia in the context of the delayed fallout of the Soviet collapse. The Long Hangover looks to a lost generation: the millions of Russians who lost their country and the subsequent attempts to restore to them a sense of purpose.
Shaun Walker is a foreign correspondent for The Guardian. He was the paper's Moscow correspondent between 2013 and 2018 and worked as a journalist in Moscow for more than a decade. He studied Russian and Soviet history at Oxford University.
List of MapsMap of Soviet UnionMap of RussiaPreface to the PaperbackPrologue Part 1: Curating the PastChapter One: A first-tier nationChapter Two: The sacred war Chapter Three: Chechnya: the deal Chapter Four: Kolyma: the end of the earth Part 2: Curating the PresentChapter Five: The Olympic dream Chapter Six: Ukraine is not dead yet Chapter Seven: The Crimea gambit Chapter Eight: The Crimean Tatars Chapter Nine: Russian Crimea Part 3: The Past Becomes the PresentChapter Ten: Donbass: the spiralChapter Eleven: War Part 4: The Past in the FutureChapter Twelve: After the war EpilogueAuthor's NoteAcknowledgmentsNotesBibliography
Intelligent and ambitious, Walker's book succeeds in providing insight into the recent history of a nation at the center of world attention.