Russia’s nostalgia machine
An idealised view of the Soviet past is preventing Russians from fighting for a better future

Walk around any Russian city, from Moscow and St. Petersburg to Yekaterinburg and Kazan, and you will come across people wearing dark blue or red sweatshirts emblazoned with that unmistakable Soviet emblem — hammer, sickle, and star. You will also see plenty of traditional fur hats — often topped with a red star — even though recent winters have been the warmest on record.
Promoting an idealised version of the past legitimises a repressive present and future.
Putin has long viewed nostalgia as a powerful means of reassuring — and subduing — the public.
If Russians are gripped by a yearning for an imaginary past, they will not fight for a better future.










