The view of the Revolution and of Lenin was Phone Number List more positive than that of the Soviet Union. Putin maintains. Now, in opinion polls, those people who rated Stalin positively were the ones who usually said they also liked Lenin, while Putin only liked one of them. At the time, this seemed to be a topic of discussion, but not passionate discussion. In other Phone Number List words, people were interested in thinking about it, but it didn't seem to matter much. As for Soviet nostalgia, it was certainly very strong among the Russian population during the first Phone Number List decades after the fall of the .
However, I suppose that the generational Phone Number List change has been fading it. In other words, we now have a whole generation that was not raised or educated in the . And one could assume that that will reduce that feeling of nostalgia. However, I'm not sure I can confirm this directly through research or observation. It is Phone Number List simply an assumption. How has Russian studies changed since the beginning of your career and what are the levels of collaboration with Phone Number List Russian historians today? Now these relationships are common and there are completely normal contacts.
There are really productive intellectual Phone Number List collaborations, like that between the British historian Yoram and Oleg in Moscow. In my case, I don't have any close collaboration like the one I just mentioned, but of course I have an ongoing professional conversation with several Russians who are experts on various topics I work on. Until now, this type of Phone Number List communication has continued. But if the war drags on, this is likely to change: there will be more suspicion of Westerners by Russians (and vice versa), and intellectual and Phone Number List professional relations will suffer.