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Word: stalinizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...rest of us, his great weakness is hope. He's attracted to it and deeply suspicious of it all the same. It's a reason he's been preoccupied lately by the brief heyday of the Soviet avant-garde in the years right after the October Revolution, before Stalin put his very big foot down and imposed the rule of socialist orthodoxy in all artistic realms. A short episode of utopianism that ended in its own flood of blue tears, those years seem to epitomize for him the absurdity and paradox of politics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Artist William Kentridge: Man of Constant Sorrow | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...climaxes with a multiscreen gallery of films connected to that production. The nose climbs a ladder in silhouette (and tumbles down); a Cossack dances. On another screen are abject snippets from the 1937 trial transcript of Nikolai Bukharin, one of the multitude of old Bolshevik leaders devoured by Stalin. It's too soon to know how Kentridge will connect all this into a coherent production. But there won't be a diamond-crusted skull or a mirror-steel bling thing anywhere near it. That you can count...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Artist William Kentridge: Man of Constant Sorrow | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

Barvikha Hotel & Spa, www.barvikhahotel.com, sits just west of Moscow, in the super-ritzy community of Rublyovka, where everyone from Joseph Stalin to Vladimir Putin to the oligarchs who once ruled Russia have camped out in sprawling dachas enveloped by thick forests...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Where to Stay in Moscow | 3/19/2009 | See Source »

...liked Mussolini, if you were missing Stalin, you'll love Lieberman." - Unnamed member of Israel's left-wing Meretz party. (Telegraph, February 10th...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Avigdor Lieberman | 2/12/2009 | See Source »

...watching Latin American students march for Che Guevara causes did a double take: these undergraduates were pouring out of campuses to oppose the new standard bearer of the Latin left. And they weren't all children of right-wing oligarchs. Many were leftists themselves, with first names like Stalin. Their beef, they said, wasn't so much with Chávez's Bolivarian Revolution, which many of them acknowledged had finally enfranchised the poor in a country that has the hemisphere's largest oil reserves but one of its most shamefully inegalitarian societies. Rather, they were part of the first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chávez Beats Back His Student Opposition | 2/1/2009 | See Source »

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