Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Gorbachev's Campaign for "Political Work" Forward and Back, 1986-1987 Chapter 3 The 19th Conference of the CPSU and the Reform of the Party's Apparat, 1988 Chapter 4 The Impact of the Congress of Peoples Deputies: 1989 Chapter 5 Gorbachev's Growing Revisionism, 1989-1990 Chapter 6 Towards the 28th Congress of the CPSU, 1990 Chapter 7 The Revival of the Secretariat, 1990-1991 Chapter 8 From Orthodoxy to Reform, January-August 1991 Chapter 9 Conclusion
Jonathan Harris is professor of political science at the University of Pittsburgh.
Perhaps the most satisfactory account that has yet appeared of what
the Gorbachev reforms meant to those who were engaged in them at
lower levels of the party structure. . . . Serious students of the
CPSU will find themselves in its debt for some time to come.
*The Russian Review*
You might have thought that there was little more to be said about
the Gorbachev period, and about its ruling party in particular.
Jonathan Harris's book suggests a rather different conclusion…. An
illuminating essay on the dynamics of political change through the
perspective of party officials who were responsible for
implementing the Gorbachev reforms, but who all too often had
little to guide them.
*The Russian Review*
The collapse of the Soviet Union remains a matter of both great
interest and of continuing research. Crucial to that collapse was
the disintegration of the Communist Party, a process that is the
focus of the book under review. Jonathan Harris seeks to explain
the differing views among party functionaries about the course and
desirability of reform of the party apparatus and its role….His
reliance on close reading of the documents, often allowing them to
talk for themselves, is a strength because it enables us to get a
flavor of the arguments and a feel for the different positions that
individuals adopted at various times…. An excellent addition to our
understanding of elite attitudes to change during perestroika.
*Journal of Cold War Studies, Summer 2005 Issue 7:3*
A useful contribution to the literature on that last, remarkable
period of Soviet history which witnessed the dismantling of the
communist system, a process which was largely completed more than
two years before the Soviet Union itself ceased to exist.
*Europe-Asia Studies*
Subverting the System addresses an issue of fundamental importance,
namely the internal evolution of the regime in the final years of
Soviet power, and in particular the contradictory approach taken by
Gorbachev in relation to the role and organization of the Communist
Party. The author's exploration of Party materials and debates
combined with a detailed reading of memoir literature and the party
press results in crucial insights into the breakdown of Party rule.
Many books have touched on these issues, but this is the first to
tackle head on developments in the apparat and thus makes a
significant and original contribution to the field.
*Richard Sakwa, University of Kent*
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