Sergei I. Zhuk is a professor of history at Ball State University. He is the author of Russia's Lost Reformation: Peasants, Millennialism, and Radical Sects in Southern Russia and Ukraine, 1830-1917. He was a Kennan Institute Research Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center in 2002-2003.
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List of Figures Acknowledgments Introduction 1. The Closed Rocket City of Dniepropetrovsk Part I. The "Beating" 1960s 2. Anti-Soviet Crimes, Poetry, and Problematic Nationalism, 1960-1968 3. The Campaign against the Novel Sobor and the End of the National Literary Revival 4. The First Wave of Music from the West 5. Beatlemania, Shocking Blue, and the Ukrainian Cossacks 6. Sources of Rock Music Consumption Part II. The Hard-Rocking 1970s 7. Western Adventure Stories and Ukrainian Historical Novels 8. Crimes from the West 9. Idiocy and Historical Romance from the West 10. The Democratization of Rock Music Consumption 11. Popular Religiosity in the Dniepropetrovsk Region Part III. The "Disco Era," Antipunk Campaigns, andKomsomol Business 12. Taming Pop Music Consumption 13. The Komsomol Magazine Rovesnik and the Ideology of Pop Music Consumption 14. Antipunk Campaigns, Antifascist Hysteria, and Human Rights Problems, 1982-1984 15. Tourism, Cultural Consumption, and Komsomol Business Conclusion Appendix Notes Selected Bibliography Index

