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To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement — the Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Professor Ben Nathans — is perhaps the sharpest, riches, and funniest account of the Soviet dissident movement ever written. Today, we’ll interview Nathans alongside the legendary Ian Johnson, whose recent book Sparks explores the Chinese dissident ecosystem. 

In this episode we discuss

  • The central enigma of the Soviet dissident movement — their boldness in the face of hopeless odds, 
  • How cybernetics, Wittgenstein, and one absent-minded professor shaped the intellectual backbone post-Stalinist dissent, 
  • Why the Soviet Union was such fertile ground for dark humor, and why humor played a vital role for the Soviet resistance movements, 
  • How the architect of Stalin’s show trials laid the groundwork for, ironically, a more professional legal system known as “socialist legality,”
  • Similarities and differences between post-Stalinist and post-Maoist systems in deaing with opposition, 
  • Plus: Why Brezhnev read The Baltimore Sun, how onion-skin paper became a tool of rebellion, and why China’s leaders study the Soviet collapse more seriously than anyone else. 

Outro music: Владимир Высоцкий — Охота на волков (YouTube Link

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Jordan Schneider is the host of the ChinaTalk podcast and newsletter. He previously worked at Kwai, Bridgewater and the Eurasia Group. His Chinese landscape paintings "show promise."
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