Utopian Promises – Fast Disillusionment: Water Power in the Soviet Union

Authors

  • Rayk Einax

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22029/ko.2010.544

Abstract

In his habilitation work, historian Klaus Gestwa presents a study concerning giant projects of energy production, which were one of the basics of Soviet command economy. As the author argues, the political leaders were quite successful during the Fifties and Sixties in evoking technophilia and faith in progress within the population. By the beginning of the Perestroika these expectations had completely vanished. However, although the "late Soviet era" consistently failed to live up to its promises, giant hydroenergy projects are not out of political minds – foremost in the People's Republic of China. With this work Gestwa provides a pioneer work voicing a distinct warning against the incalculable risks of such projects.

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Published

2010-07-31

Issue

Section

KULT_reviews

How to Cite

“Utopian Promises – Fast Disillusionment: Water Power in the Soviet Union”. 2010. KULT_online, no. 24 (July). https://doi.org/10.22029/ko.2010.544.