The Soviet Union is undergoing a profound social and cultural transformation driven by Mikhail Gorbachev’s policies of glasnost and perestroika. This shift is most visible in the liberalization of the arts, where rock music has moved from clandestine tape exchanges to official "Palaces of Youth," and theater companies like the Mali and the Abbey Theatre exchange are now staging once-prohibited texts by Beckett and UNESCO. Religious life is similarly emerging from the underground; Catholic and Russian Orthodox churches report overflowing, devotional congregations, while the state has begun returning confiscated icons and monasteries to the church ahead of the Russian Orthodox millennium. Despite this "thaw," a "sandwich of conservative thinking" within the middle-tier bureaucracy slows the pace of economic reforms, such as the opening of cooperative cafes. While citizens embrace newfound freedoms in music, literature, and worship, a deep-seated caution remains regarding the permanence of these changes and the potential for a return to past repression.
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