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For decades before the internet existed, scientists, technologists, novelists, and enthusiasts of all descriptions dreamed of instantaneous, worldwide communication systems. What forms such systems might take and what technologies could be used to accomplish this goal were open questions—questions asked by people around the world, including in the Cold War–era superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union.
Media archaeologist Natalia Konradova examines the history of the internet in Russia and its predecessor state, cutting through layers of technological history and dusting off conceptual artifacts of the past. Inspired by the fundamental question of how Soviets imagined future technologies, she investigates experiments with telepathy alongside the (then equally improbable) dream of a global, digitally connected computer network. The story of the Russian internet is inextricably wound up with Soviet society and the history of the Cold War. Hacking the Iron Curtain is therefore as much a cultural and political history as it is a technological one.
Natalia Konradova, a cultural historian and journalist, is a member of the project Andersdenken digital at the Peter Szondi Institute of Comparative Literature at the Freie UniversitÄt Berlin. She previously published a Russian-language book on the same topic, titled Arkheologiia Russkogo Interneta.