FROM THE EDITORS
The New Scholarship on the Brezhnev Era . . . 475–79
ARTICLES
Nikolay Tsyrempilov and Irina Sodnomova How Did Lamaites Become Buddhists? Buddhist Modernism in Late Imperial Russia . . . 481–512
Anna Whittington An Anxious Unraveling: Perestroika and the Fracturing of the Soviet People . . . 513–45
STATE OF THE FIELD: THE BREZHNEV ERA
Susanne Schattenberg A Time of “Normalization” and Change: Research on Brezhnev’s Rule and Domestic Policies . . . 547–66
Rósa Magnúsdóttir Practicing Internationalism: The Cold War and Soviet Superpower Ambitions, 1964–82 . . . 567–80
Artemy M. Kalinovsky The “Soviet South” in the Brezhnev Era . . . 581–608
REACTION
Juliane Fürst On the Cusp of Change? Thoughts on the Roundtable about the Brezhnev Years . . . 609–24
REVIEW ESSAYS
Willard Sunderland Got Civilization? Empire and the Empress in the 18th Century . . . 625–35
Paul W. Werth Fragmentation and Integration in an Economic Key . . . 636–43
Alexander V. Reznik The Russian Civil War after 100 Years: Within and Beyond the Historiographical Front Lines . . . 644–58
Orel Beilinson How Do You Say “Entangled and Transnational Histories” in Arabic? . . . 659–67
IN MEMORIAM
Evgeny Dobrenko Katerina Clark (1941–2024): Literary History as a Device . . . 668–75
Michael David-Fox Katerina Clark’s Ecosystem . . . 676–82
Contributors to This Issue . . . 683–85