<p><strong>`Pilkington starts out with better credentials than almost all other Western and Russian researchers (who are largely middle-aged men) into Russian youth culture: she is young, punkish and </strong><em>au fait</em><strong> with modern youth culture. Add to that her fluent Russian, solid knowledge of Russian society cultural theories in East and West, and the reader is faced with a unique phenomenon - a book written from the scholarly perspective of a Western sociologist and by someone who is as much </strong><em>nasha</em><strong> ("one of us") to Russian as to Western youth groups. Her study is all the more authoritative in that its final section is based on two periods of fieldwork in Moscow during which she </strong><em>tusovala</em><strong> ("hung out") with various youth groups, particularly the </strong><em>stilyagi</em><strong>, experiences harnassed to painstaking ethnographic information gathering .... the book will long be quoted as an enriching and seminial work on the study of youth culture.'</strong> - <em>James Riordan, Europe-Asia Studies</em><br /><br /><strong>`It is an essential book for all students of youth culture, whether they have a particular interest in Russia or not. ... As an example of how an exploration of youth culture can be the centre of a wider social study of a historical period, Pilkington's book must be judged very highly.'</strong> - <em>Young People Now</em><br /><br /><strong>`Pilkington's enthusiasm for her subject and her mastery of cultural/ethnographic approaches shine through and so the reader gains a rare insight into what makes Russian youth tick.'</strong> - <em>Christopher Williams, Education in Russia, the Independent States and Eastern Europe</em><br /><br /><strong>`What rocked the steppes before McDonald's, Coca-Cola, and hordes of other post-perestroika carpetbaggers arrived to fleece the youth market? Author Hilary Pilkington... aims to tell us. Through theoretical analysis, field work, and interviews, she chronicles... the genesis of Russian youth movements form the preiod immediately preceeding the 1917 Bolshevik revolution through 1993's burgeoning free-market frenzy, eschewing glib pop historicism in favour of painstaking research'</strong> - <em>San Francisco Bay Chronicle</em></p>