Hero Projects

Abstract “Hero projects”—such large-scale technologies for military, resource exploitation, and power production as smelters and mines, pipelines and railroads, hydropower stations and canals, and nuclear reactors—have been central to Russian development from Lenin and Stalin to Putin. Because Russi...

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Main Author: Josephson, Paul R.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Oxford University PressNew York 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001
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spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001 2024-09-30T14:31:34+00:00 Hero Projects The Russian Empire and Big Technology from Lenin to Putin Josephson, Paul R. 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001 en eng Oxford University PressNew York ISBN 0197698395 9780197698396 9780197698426 book 2023 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001 2024-09-17T04:29:18Z Abstract “Hero projects”—such large-scale technologies for military, resource exploitation, and power production as smelters and mines, pipelines and railroads, hydropower stations and canals, and nuclear reactors—have been central to Russian development from Lenin and Stalin to Putin. Because Russia’s military might and economic strength depend on its resources, its leaders determined to mine them, enrich them, fire up boilers and turn turbines with them, and use poorly equipped workers and gulag prisoners to tame them. From Arctic tundra to deep forest taiga, from the northwest to arid Central Asia and the Far East, they built roads and railroads, boilers and factories, canals and irrigation networks, all for the benefit of the state. The embrace of “hero projects,” “projects of the century,” and megaprojects, as successive regimes have called them, continues to be a major feature of Russian political rule in the twenty-first century. If the tools and devices were modernized and became more powerful and efficient, the purposes of enhancing state power and military might have remained. Many Soviet-era and Soviet-inspired projects have been reborn in the twenty-first century through massive infusions of state funding, to the benefit of oligarchs. All of them reflect the desire to enhance state power, placate citizens in a time of economic or military challenges, and demonstrate to the world the nation’s technological verve. Sadly, hero projects have served the Kremlin’s military to seize territory, as the conquering of Eastern Europe after World War II and the ongoing war against Ukraine reveal. Book Arctic taiga Tundra Oxford University Press Arctic
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description Abstract “Hero projects”—such large-scale technologies for military, resource exploitation, and power production as smelters and mines, pipelines and railroads, hydropower stations and canals, and nuclear reactors—have been central to Russian development from Lenin and Stalin to Putin. Because Russia’s military might and economic strength depend on its resources, its leaders determined to mine them, enrich them, fire up boilers and turn turbines with them, and use poorly equipped workers and gulag prisoners to tame them. From Arctic tundra to deep forest taiga, from the northwest to arid Central Asia and the Far East, they built roads and railroads, boilers and factories, canals and irrigation networks, all for the benefit of the state. The embrace of “hero projects,” “projects of the century,” and megaprojects, as successive regimes have called them, continues to be a major feature of Russian political rule in the twenty-first century. If the tools and devices were modernized and became more powerful and efficient, the purposes of enhancing state power and military might have remained. Many Soviet-era and Soviet-inspired projects have been reborn in the twenty-first century through massive infusions of state funding, to the benefit of oligarchs. All of them reflect the desire to enhance state power, placate citizens in a time of economic or military challenges, and demonstrate to the world the nation’s technological verve. Sadly, hero projects have served the Kremlin’s military to seize territory, as the conquering of Eastern Europe after World War II and the ongoing war against Ukraine reveal.
format Book
author Josephson, Paul R.
spellingShingle Josephson, Paul R.
Hero Projects
author_facet Josephson, Paul R.
author_sort Josephson, Paul R.
title Hero Projects
title_short Hero Projects
title_full Hero Projects
title_fullStr Hero Projects
title_full_unstemmed Hero Projects
title_sort hero projects
publisher Oxford University PressNew York
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
taiga
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
taiga
Tundra
op_source ISBN 0197698395 9780197698396 9780197698426
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197698396.001.0001
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