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  1. 27 de feb. de 2023 · Vladimir Putin wished a happy 85 th birthday to writer, journalist and public activist Alexander Prokhanov. The message reads, in part: “People in Russia and abroad know you as a talented writer and journalist, an outstanding public activist and debater. You have always firmly defended your convictions and civic position at historical turning ...

  2. Prokhanov’s 1994 novel The Palace is remarkable for its change in message and tone from the narratives of his Soviet-era writing on Afghanistan: it openly questions the Soviet Politburo’s decision to invade, and includes surreal dreamlike sequences that, I argue, reflect his contemporaneous collaboration with Alexander Dugin, founding proponent of neo-Eurasianism.

  3. All translations into English are my own [H.M.].) 15 See Edmund Griffiths, Alexander Prokhanov and Post-Soviet Esotericism, unpublished D. Phil. thesis, University of Oxford, 2007. Rosalind Marsh describes Mr. Hexogen as a ‘new political novel’: see Rosalind Marsh, Literature, History and Identity in Post-Soviet Russia, 1991-2006, Bern: Peter Lang. 2007, p. 335.

  4. 3 de nov. de 2022 · Another “frequent visitor” to the Kremlin is Alexander Prokhanov, a “patriotic” Russian writer and editor-in-chief of Zavtra (“Tomorrow”), a weekly newspaper that openly embraces the state’s “imperial ideology.” Notably, in 1991, Prokhanov supported the attempted putsch.

  5. All of that came to an end when, in 1995, Russia regained her footing in the Caucasus to thwart a violent Chechen rebellion. Alexander Prokhanov lays bare the history and events surrounding New Year’s Eve in 1995, when Russian troops attacked the Presidential Palace in the rebellious capital city of Grozny.

  6. Alexander Andreyevich Prokhanov (Russian: Алекса́ндр Андре́евич Проха́нов; born 26 February 1938) is a Russian writer, a member of the secretariat of the Writers Union of the Russian Federation and the author of more than 30 novels and short story collections. He is the editor-in-chief of Russia's extreme-right (or radical-reactionary) newspaper Zavtra ...

  7. popular writer Alexander Prokhanov (b. 1938). Prokhanov edits a newspaper with the futuristic title Zavtra (Tomorrow), and writes fiction that is a postmodernist collage of futuristic themes based on the fear of globalization, biological wars, cloning, genetic engineering and, most