Political Girl: Life and Fate in Russia by Maria Alyokhina
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What do you do when your country becomes a repressive, authoritarian state? In “Political Girl”, says Maria Alyokhina, you fight. Through vivid, diary-like entries spanning prison, protests, solidarity with Ukraine, and an escape in disguise – this is a fierce, furious and darkly witty chronicle of resistance, art and survival under brutal rule.
What can you do when your country becomes a repressive authoritarian state?
2014: Russia prepares to host the Winter Olympics. Russia invades Crimea.
Putin is re-elected president. Several political prisoners are amnestied and released early from prison. Maria Alyokhina is among them.
She had spent two years in a penal colony after performing the punk prayer ‘Virgin Mary, Banish Putin’ with her friends in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. They had warned the rest of the world of the dangers of authoritarianism, but the Russia she finds when she gets out of prison is even more oppressive. What can you do, she asks, when your country has been seized by all-powerful men who are waging war against another country and their own citizens? As Maria recounts her brave and colourful protests, we are drawn straight into the world of grassroots opposition and witness the absurd measures the Russian state takes to contain protest.
And when the full-scale war against Ukraine starts and the Russian opposition is repeatedly silenced, Maria and her activist friends continue to resist despite the high stakes. They fight increasingly absurd cycles of detention and house arrest: sometimes with the smallest acts such as going for a walk or having a rainbow ice cream, until, faced with a new prison sentence, she escapes Russia in May 2022 dressed as a food delivery courier. Her story, like her life, is fiercely courageous, darkly funny and highly inspiring to anyone who wants to stand up for the truth.
'Witty, urgent, and unflinching... her story speaks to anyone who believes that protest can be art, and that art can confront, disrupt, and even destabilize authoritarian power' – Alpa Shah
Hardback
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I have only just started the book, which I got after hearing the talk online from Pushkin House. It is part of a process of understanding and from the start I was motivated to get up to speed with the histories and attitudes that are expressed. I will read through the book carefully together with other related topics. The desire for empathic exploration of a range of points of view is clearly something that many of the talks at Pushkin House present for me. And as I said at the beginning the whole range of talks, books and conversations is a process and is itself a kind of activism
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