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  1. Immediate legacy. A Brezhnev plaque mounted on the wall of the University of Dneprodzerzhinsk. When Leonid Brezhnev died on 10 November 1982 Yuri Andropov was elected chairman of the committee in charge of managing his funeral. According to Time magazine Brezhnev's death was mourned by the majority of Soviet citizens. [3]

  2. essence of a leadership era. ' Stability of cadres' was Brezhnev's promise to the party apparat and the state bureaucrats, and it was a commitment honored - not only in the security afforded to. officials in their offices, but, especially in the inner core of party and state leadership, by. the warding off of generational renewal as well.

  3. 22. Juli 2022 · Brezhnev-era animated films, like most Soviet cultural production, were quickly canonized and often appealed to adults. Their reach and ironic content perhaps should not be surprising: it is a commonplace that under late Socialism the genres of animation and children’s theater were subject to less state censorship (cartoons and other visual media are difficult to monitor for subversive ...

  4. Abstract. The official ideological centrepiece of the Brezhnev years was the concept of Developed Socialism. In the period since Brezhnev’s death, it has become the archetypal symbol of the era of stagnation. Under Gorbachev (and after), Developed Socialism was subject to extensive criticism for a number of reasons.

  5. 27. Apr. 2016 · Brezhnev refused to implement reforms that could've addressed certain structural problems in the country; there was a lack of freedom; and a need to incorporate younger, new talent into the party and state apparatus. But the idea that this was a "stagnant" period is not entirely accurate. It was a talking point primarily advanced by Gorbachev, who hammered this point home in order to justify ...

  6. Hence, the interviews describe life in the Soviet Union as the Brezhnev era was drawing to a close-the period now referred to in the Soviet press as the 'period of stagnation' (period zastoya). The late Brezhnev era provides the essential baseline for understanding the perestroika phenomenon. Presumably, the Soviet leadership had its own percep-

  7. When Leonid Brezhnev came to power in 1964, the Soviet empire consisted of Cuba and six reliable satellites in Eastern Europe, the bloc was dominated politically and economically by the Soviet Union, and East–West interactions were kept to a minimum. Soviet military capabilities at this time, moreover, were clearly inferior to the military ...