University of Illinois
History 462
Prof. Diane P. Koenker
Spring 2014
History of the Soviet Union since 1917
Paper Assignment:
Personal Narratives and Memoirs
The paper will be based on a
careful reading of a personal narrative, and should include the following
points:
(1)
who is the author and what is the author's point of
view;
(2)
the major themes of the narrative in terms of the
historical context of twentieth-century Russia; and
(3)
In addition, you should choose a particular theme, event, or episode in the
narrative and compare the author's analysis of it with the analysis found in
several works of historical scholarship. For example, you might take
Alexander Werth's Moscow
War Diary and compare his discussion of home front morale with the work by
Mark Harrison and John Barber, The Soviet
Home Front 1941-1945: A Social and Economic History of the USSR in World War
II; John Erickson, The Road to
Stalingrad; and the Soviet Great
Patriotic War of the Soviet Union, 1941-1945. You might take Leon Trotsky's My Life account of the October 1917
revolution and compare it with several recent works on the Russian revolution.
Or you might take Elena Bonner's (Mothers and Daughters) description of her
high school days and compare it with Larry Holmes, The Kremlin and the School House, and other works on Soviet
education.
Choose one of the following
personal narratives to be the focus of your 12-15 page
paper.
The narratives are grouped
roughly according to the chronology of the course. No book can be claimed
by more than one student:
first come, first served.
You must see me in person in my office during office hours or at another
time to discuss your book choice. I
will also schedule "group office hours" after spring break to discuss
your work on the paper. The deadline
for choosing a book is March 14. Papers are due Monday, May 12, 11 a.m.
I. Revolution and Civil War
Chernov, Victor. The Great Russian Revolution. Trans. and
abridged by Philip E. Mosely. New Haven,
Conn., 1936. 466 pp.
Chernov was the leader of the peasant-oriented Socialist
Revolutionary Party from 1906 to 1917, and remained active in
the socialist opposition to the Bolsheviks until 1921. He was Minister of Agriculture in the
Provisional Government in 1917, a leading socialist insider. The memoir focuses in detail on the ten
months of 1917 between the February and October revolutions, from Chernov's vantage point as Provisional Government member
and leader of the SR party.
Denikin, Anton I. The
Russian Turmoil: Memoirs: Military, Social, and Political. London, 1922.
344 pp.
Denikin was a tsarist general who became commander-in-chief
of the White Army during the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1921. This memoir recounts his experience in
the 1917 revolution, from his vantage point of service in the army general
staff. He describes the situation at the front in 1917, the failed July
offensive, relations with the Provisional Government, and his role in the Kornilov mutiny of August 1917 that put Denikin
briefly in prison and ended hopes for a compromise settlement to the crisis of
revolutionary power.
Dotsenko, Paul. The
Struggle for a Democracy in Siberia, 1917-1920: Eyewitness Account of a
Contemporary. Stanford, 1983. 178 pp.
An activist member of the Socialist Revolutionary party,
Dotsenko was serving a term of Siberian exile when
the 1917 revolution erupted. He remained in Siberia, taking part in the SR
government in Omsk and later observing the military take-over of Admiral
Kolchak and the impact of foreign intervention in the civil war in Siberia.
Kerensky, Alexander. Russia and History's Turning Point. New York,
1965.556 pp.
Kerensky was a civil rights lawyer and moderate
socialist in 1917 when he catapulted to fame and notoriety first as Minister of
Justice in the Provisional Government and then Prime Minister. He escaped from
Russia after the October Revolution in order to rally a non-Bolshevik
opposition, then spent the rest of his life writing
and reflecting on what went wrong in 1917.
His first attempt, The Catastrophe,
was published in 1922. This more
mature reflection, which dwells on his own biography (he and Lenin were
schoolmates as young boys) was published after he had lived
many years in the United States.
Liberman, Simon. Building
Lenin's Russia. Chicago, 1945. 229 pp.
Liberman was a Menshevik businessman in the years before the
revolution, and although he never joined the Communist party, worked for the
new regime during the period of the civil war as a specialist in charge of the
timber industry. He provides
recollections of many of the leading Bolshevik industrial figures and of his
international trade negotiations in 1920 and the early years of NEP. Professing to be a loyal Soviet citizen,
he nonetheless left the USSR under political suspicion in 1926.
Mstislavskii, Sergei D. Five Days Which Transformed Russia. Bloomington, Ind., 1988 (1922). Translated by Elizabeth Zelensky. 168 pp.
Mstislavskii, born in 1876, was a scientist and Social Revolutionary who favored radical of the imperial regime and became a champion of peasants' and workers' rights. He served as an officer of the General Staff Academy in Petersburg during WWI, and later stood with the Bolsheviks. This is an account of the events of 1917, as seen and experienced by the author himself.
Shklovsky, Viktor. A
Sentimental Journey: Memoirs, 1917-1922. Translated by Richard Sheldon.
Ithaca, N.Y., 1984. 304 pp.
Shklovsky was a major Russian writer and proponent of
Futurism, who served in the tsarist army and then Red Army between 1914 and
1922. His memoirs detail his
experience among front line troops during the 1917 revolution and during the
Civil War in Ukraine and in Persia.
Sukhanov, Nikolai. The
Russian Revolution, 1917: A Personal Record. Trans. and
abridged by Joel Carmichael.
London, 1955. 699 pp.
The single best personal narrative
of the 1917 revolution in Petrograd. Sukhanov
was a moderate socialist, a Menshevik, whose analysis of the political events
of 1917 and perceptive vignettes of the major revolutionary leaders remains a
fundamental source for our understanding of revolutionary politics.
Trotsky, Leon. My
Life. London,
1930. 602 pp.
Leon Trotsky was one of the giants of the
revolutionary movement, a brilliant revolutionary strategist, organizer of the
October revolution and creator of the Red Army, and the principal rival to
Stalin for the leadership of the USSR after the death of Lenin. The memoir covers his life to 1929, when
he was expelled from the country by the Communist Party: his education,
activism in the underground revolutionary movement, role in the revolution and
civil war, his relations with Lenin and his role in the Communist Party
opposition up until his exile to Kazakhstan in 1927, and expulsion from the
country in 1929. Trotsky remained a vocal opponent of Stalin in exile, until he was killed by a NKVD agent in Mexico in 1940, and even
after that, the Trotskyite wing of the communist movement remained an important
element of worldwide left politics.
II. 1920s
and 1930s
Allilueva, Svetlana. Twenty Letters to a Friend. Translated by Priscilla Johnson
McMillan. New York, 1967. 246 pp.
The daughter of Joseph Stalin who defected to the
west in the 1960s, these "letters" relate her memories of family and
father as written in Moscow in 1963.
Topics include the death of Stalin and his last years; her childhood,
grandparents, and family; her mother, Stalin's second wife, daughter of a
leading Bolshevik revolutionary, who committed suicide in 1932; Stalin as Dad;
school and studies in the 1930s (she moved in the same circles as Elena Bonner,
below); the war; her first marriage to the son of one of Stalin's close
associates, Zhdanov; and a bit about the years after Stalin's death.
Andreev-Khomiakov. Bitter Waters: Life and Work in Stalin's
Russia. Boulder, Colo., 1997. 195 pp.
Released from a penal colony in 1935, Andreev-Khomiakov's memoir recounts his efforts to find work as a
suspicious ex-prisoner, first in the Fish trust and then in the lumber
industry. His account describes how
workers got by in the 1930s, gives details of daily life, ordinary corruption,
party incompetence, and attitudes towards authority on the eve of the great
patriotic war.
Baitalsky, Mikhail. Notebooks for the Grandchildren. Translated and edited by
Marilyn Vogt-Downey. Atlantic Highlands, NJ, 1995. 416 pp.
A native of Odessa, Baitalsky
became a journalist and supporter of Trotsky as a young man (he was born in
1903). Arrested in 1929, and again
in 1935, he was released from the Vorkuta camp in 1941. After the war, he served another camp
sentence from 1950 to 1956. These
"notebooks" were composed in the same spirit of thaw as were Ginzburg's memoirs, and his testimony was handed over to
dissident historian Roy Medvedev, to be used as
evidence in Medvedev's indictment of Stalin, Let History Judge.
Bonner, Elena. Mothers and Daughters. Translated by Antonina
W. Bouis. New York, 1992.
349 pp.
Bonner was the daughter of high-ranking communist
officials. In the 1960s she would become a leading dissident, and together with
her husband Andrei Sakharov emerge as the conscience of the Soviet Union during
the regimes of Brezhnev and Gorbachev.
This memoir of her early life describes her experience as a school girl in the time of the purges of the 1930s, as seen
from the point of view of the privileged daughter of the revolutionary elite.
Borodin, N.M. One Man in His Time. New York, 1955.
344 pp.
Borodin came from a Don Cossack family, born in 1905,
and became a "Soviet man." He received his education under Soviet
power and became a biologist, working also as a "consultant" for the
GPU (secret police.) By the time of
the war, he was a leading official in the Soviet pharmaceutical industry, and
was entrusted with visits to England and the U.S. to learn how to manufacture
penicillin. He remained quite loyal
to the USSR, but doubts began to surface after the war, and he defected to
England in 1948. The memoir,
however, represents the experiences of one quite loyal to the regime.
Burrell, George. An
American Engineer Looks at Russia. Boston, 1932. 324
pp.
Burrell worked for 18 months as a petroleum engineer
in 1931-32, headquartered in Grozny (capital of Chechnya). A critical but supportive observer of
the Soviet industrialization effort, he describes many aspects of life and work
in the period of the five-year plan.
Ciliga, Anton. The Russian Enigma.
London, 1940. 304 pp.
An Italian communist, Ciliga
went to the USSR in 1926, where he participated in Communist International
politics and witnessed the climax of the opposition movements. He taught for a time at the Communist
University, and observed the collectivization campaign and first five-year
plan. He was arrested in 1930 and first imprisoned as a spy, then exiled to the
Urals.
Fischer, Markoosha. My Lives in Russia. New York, 1944.
269 pp.
A supporter of the Soviet Union, Fischer had left
Russia before 1914 because of her opposition to the tsarist regime; she
returned in 1922 and lived there from 1927 to 1939 as the wife of the American
foreign correspondent Louis Fischer.
Her narrative focuses on living in Moscow in the 1930s as a keen
observer of events around her, as a member of the literary elite, and as the
mother of two boys who grew up and went to school in the USSR of the five-year
plans and purges.
Hindus, Maurice. Broken
Earth. New York, 1926. 287 pp.
Hindus was a sympathizer of the socialist revolution
who returned to his native village and to Russia several times and reported on
what he encountered for readers back in the United States. In this account, he
visited his native village at a time when socialism and capitalism were
competing for the allegiance of the peasantry, seen in his eyes as combat
between the new and the old. He describes his encounters with various village
types, the new youth, women, and the new socialist state farms. A conversational tone attempts to
capture the flavor of the arguments he heard while visiting his old village.
Hindus, Maurice. Red
Bread: Collectivization in a Russian Village. Allahabad,
1945. (Reprint 1988). 372 pp.
A journalist who had left Russia before the
revolution and who returned as a sympathizer of the Soviet regime, Hindus
revisited his native village in 1929-30, where he describes the
collectivization campaign and the reaction of the villagers to it.
Krber, Lili. Life in a Soviet Factory.
Translated by Claude W. Sykes. London, 1933. 280 pp.
A German radical and member of the Society of
Authors, Krber spent two months as a worker at
Leningrad's Putilov factory from July to August 1931,
at the height of the first five-year plan.
In a novelesque account, she describes work,
daily life, culture, politics, bureaucracy, and her encounters with the GPU.
Kopelev, Lev. The Education of a True Believer. Translated by Gary Kern. New York, 1980. 328 pp.
Kopelev became an important dissident in the 1970s until his
expulsion to Germany. He was an associate of Solzhenitsyn and his character
appears in Solzhenitsyn's novel The First
Circle. Kopelev,
a philologist by training, wrote several memoirs. This one describes his youth and
upbringing in the 1920s, his schooling, his relationship to the Jewish rituals
of his family, his sense of Ukrainian identity, his
formative years as an intellectual.
He joined the party and aided in the collectivization and grain
collection drives of the 1930s before entering Kharkov University in 1933. This memoir ends with the beginnings of
the disappearance of his friends to the purges in 1937.
Kopelev, Lev. Ease My
Sorrows: A Memoir. Translated by Antonina W. Bouis. New York, 1983.
This volume of Kopelev's
memoirs deals with his imprisonment between 1947 and 1953 in a special labor
camp that functioned as a closed laboratory for the Soviet military. Here he worked on voice-decoding
technology. Among his prisonmates was a
mathematician, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who used this prison as the center piece of what I think is his best novel, The First Circle. Kopelev is the
model for the character Lev Rubin.
Kravchenko, Victor. I
Chose Freedom: The Personal and Political Life of a Soviet Official. New York, 1946. 481 pp.
A Soviet
official who defected to the United States in 1944 when posted to Washington,
this Ukrainian engineer and Communist party official defends his choice by
relating his childhood on the banks of the Dnieper, his passion for freedom
unleashed by the revolution and civil war, his enthusiasm as a member of the Komsomol and Communist party, his work as an industrial
specialist during the five-year plans, his service in the munitions industry
during the second world war, and his growing doubts about the legitimacy of the
Soviet system.
Larina, Anna. This I
Cannot Forget: The Memoirs of Nikolai Bukharin's Widow. New
York, 1991. 384 pp.
Larina became the young wife of Nikolai Bukharin, one of
the leading Bolsheviks throughout the 1920s and by 1930 a veteran
oppositionist. The narrative
relates their life together as simultaneously members of the Soviet elite in
the 1930s and as victims of Stalin's purges, with special attention paid to the
process of the terror, Beria, prison, prison camps, and Stalin.
Leder, Mary M. My Life in
Stalinist Russia: An American Woman Looks Back. Bloomington,
2001, edited by Laurie Bernstein. 344 pp.
Leder moved with her parents from California to the Jewish autonomous republic of Birobidzhan as a teenager, but she soon flew the coop for the bright lights of Moscow in the mid-1930s. Her story recounts her life and loves, amidst purges, war, and young motherhood. The book offers a microcosm of Soviet history and a window into everyday life and culture in the Stalin era.
Lyons, Eugene. Assignment in Utopia. New York, 1937.
658 pp.
Lyons was a U.S. journalist, sympathetic to radical
causes, who began reporting from the USSR in 1927. His memoir describes his experience with
American radicalism from 1919-1927, and covers the major developments in the
Soviet Union from 1927 to 1933, including the political oppositions,
collectivization, industrialization, cultural politics, famine, and includes a
notorious interview with Stalin.
Lyons was expelled from the country in 1933.
Mandelshtam, Nadezhda. Hope against Hope.
Translated by Max Hayward. New York, 1970. 431 pp.
The widow of the brilliant Russian poet Osip Mandelshtam, this memoir
tells the story of his persecution by the NKVD from 1934 until his arrest in
1937. She poignantly describes the
life of persecution, interrogation, and uncertainty all the while emphasizing
the creative genius of Mandelshtam and his zeal to
write poet, and hers to memorize his, in this terrible period. An evocative memoir of
survival and loss, this volume was followed by her Hope Abandoned in 1974, which tells the story of Mandelshtam before 1934, and hers after he
disappeared into the camps. (Her first name, Nadezhda,
means "hope" in Russian.) One of the most
beautiful literary memoirs of the period.
Mochulsky, Fyodor Vasilevich. Gulag Boss: A Soviet Memoir. Edited and
translated by Deborah Kaple. Oxford,
2011. 225 pp.
Mochulsky (1918-1999) lived his life in the USSR as a
Communist party member and a diplomat.
At age 22, he was sent to the Gulag in the Far North as a prison
supervisor for a work crew. He describes the conditions in the camps from the
point of view of a boss, not a prisoner.
His story reflects on the question how apparently Ōordinary menĶ can
participate in extraordinarily evil actions.
Petrov, Vladimir. Escape from the Future. Bloomington, 1973.
470 pp.
Arrested in 1935 as a young university student in
Leningrad, Petrov spent the next years in the gold
fields of Kolyma, in the Soviet Far East.
He was released during the war and recounts his journey back to European
Russia, and then to the U.S., providing a novelist's eye view (and a hostile
one) of Soviet society at the end of the war. When he wrote these memoirs, Petrov was a senior Russian historian at George Washington
University.
Robinson, Robert, with Jonathan Slevin.
Black on Red: A Black American's 44 Years
inside the Soviet Union. Washington, D.C., 1988. 436 pp.
Robinson, a skilled machinist from Detroit, went to
the USSR in 1930 to work in the industrialization of the Soviet Union. Assigned to the Stalingrad Tractor
Plant, he witnessed the industrialization of the country, the Great Purges, the
war, the death of Stalin, and the regime of Khrushchev. With perceptive comments on racism in
the USSR, Robinson describes life in a Soviet factory and provides observations
on a wide range of the Soviet experience.
He left the country in 1974.
Rosenberg, Suzanne. A Soviet Odyssey. New York, 1988. 212 pp.
Daughter of militant Bolshevik parents, Rosenberg
followed them to Canadian emigration, and returned with them to the USSR when
she was 16 years old, in 1931. She
describes life among the intellectuals and artists of Moscow in the 1930s, the
coming of war, and the political crackdown after the war, in which first her friends
and husband were arrested as part of the campaign against
"cosmopolitanism" (which was usually a code word for Jews) and then
she herself was arrested. She was released from prison with the death of Stalin
in 1953, and left the USSR for Canada in 1986.
Rukeyser, Walter. Working
for the Soviets: an American Engineer in Russia. London,
1932. 286 pp.
A mining engineer who travelled to the USSR in August
1929 on a consulting contract with the Soviet asbestos industry, Rukeyser spent
about a year in this work, and describes his travels to the Urals, his contacts
with the industrial bureaucracy, negotiations between Western firms and Soviet
bureaucrats, the GPU, his impressions of workers, and the state of work in the
mines.
Smith, Andrew. I
Was a Soviet Worker. Supplemented by Maria Smith. New
York, 1936. 298 pp.
An American trade union organizer of Slovak
background, Smith spent three years as a worker at Moscow's Elektrozavod
from 1932 to 1935. He describes many aspects of Soviet life in the early thirties,
including factory life and labor, health care, women, children, daily life, and
shopping. Many vignettes are added by his wife, Maria Smith, whose illnesses
provoked their desire to leave the USSR and return to the United States. Smith describes an extended voyage down
the Volga as far as the Caspian city of Astrakhan, as well as his growing
disillusionment with the USSR and his attempts to leave.
Weissberg, Alexander. The
Accused. Translated by Edward Fitzgerald. New York, 1951.
518 pp.
One of the first memoirs of the purge and prison
system to be published. Weissberg was an Austrian
scientist who moved to the USSR in 1931.
Arrested in 1937, he uses his prison experience to reflect on the past
events in the USSR, condemning the Soviet system. He was deported to Germany in 1940 after
3 years in prison.
Witkin, Zara. An
American Engineer in Stalin's Russia: the Memoirs of Zara Witkin,
1932-1934. Edited with an introduction by Michael Gelb. Berkeley,
1991. 363 pp.
Witkin went to the Soviet Union in 1932 when he was 31
years old, an ardent believer in the Soviet project of refashioning
humankind. He moved among the
expatriate circles of Moscow, and counted among his friends Eugene Lyons; he
also began a love affair with a Soviet actress, whom the editor, Gelb,
interviewed in Moscow in 1989 (see the introduction). As an engineer, Witkin was assigned to the factory-building trust and
describes his work and conflicts with the industrialization process, including
many nasty encounters with the OGPU.
He describes an excursion to the Caucasus and his difficulties in
leaving the USSR in 1934.
Yakir, Pyotr. A Childhood in Prison. Ed. Robert
Conquest. London, 1972. 155 pp.
The son of a Red Army general who was purged in the
1930s, Yakir grew up to
become an important individual in the dissident movement, facing his own show
trial for seditious behavior in 1973.
In this memoir of his childhood and youth, he recounts his banishment to
a childrenÕs colony of disgraced persons.
III. War
and Era of Post-Stalin Reform
Berezhkov, Valentin. History in the Making: Memoirs of World War
II Diplomacy. Moscow, 1983. 493 pp.
Berezhkov was a young engineer who was tapped to serve as
Stalin's interpreter during World War II, and he accompanied Stalin to the
major allied conferences. He also
served as interpreter in 1940 in Berlin, during the period of the Nazi-Soviet
pact. Note the date of publication
of this memoir: 1983, by Progress Publishers in Moscow: in other words, it appeared at the
height of the era of stagnation with the official imprimatur of the Soviet
government.
Burlatsky, Fedor. Khrushchev and the First Russian Spring.
Translated by Daphne Skillen. London,
1991. 286 pp.
A political adviser to Khrushchev from 1960 to 1965, Burlatsky's narrative describes his association with some
of the Soviet leaders including Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Andropov. He discusses the period of the
post-Stalin thaw, the 20th Party Congress and the anti-Stalin efforts,
international relations with Yugoslavia and Albania, the Cuban missile crisis,
summit meetings, the fall of Khrushchev and the rise of Brezhnev. Burlatsky
was especially close to inner circles from 1960 to 1965, and he carefully
describes Kremlin politics in this period.
Djilas, Milovan. Conversations with Stalin.
Translated by Michael B. Petrovich. New York, 1962. 211 pp.
As a young representative of the Communist Party of
Yugoslavia, Djilas made three trips to Moscow between 1944 and 1948, and his
memoir charts the deteriorating relations between the USSR and Yugoslavia. Along the way, he encounters the Soviet
elite, including Stalin, Molotov, Khrushchev, and Zhukov, and describes them
and their policies. Later, Djilas would write an important account of the bureaucratization
of communism, The New Class.
Ehrenburg, Ilya. The War, 1941-1945.
Cleveland, 1964. 198 pp.
Ehrenburg was a major Soviet novelist and journalist
who covered Western Europe before 1941, and served as a war correspondent from
1941-1945. This portion of his
6-volume memoir reports on the home front in 1941, conversations with soldiers,
and his reporting for the army newspaper Red
Star. As a war correspondent,
Ehrenburg was based in Moscow, and traveled from time to time to the various
fronts, including the western front as the Red Army began to drive the Germans
out of their country after 1943.
Ehrenburg, Ilya. Post-War Years, 1945-1954. Translated by
Tatiana Shebunina. Cleveland, 1967.
349 pp.
Ehrenburg was a major Soviet novelist and journalist
who covered Western Europe before 1941, and served as a war correspondent from
1941-1945. He became a leading
activist in the World Peace Council after 1945. This portion of his 6-volume memoir
observes events in eastern Europe, the Nuremburg trial, the US, China, the
Jewish Anti-fascist committee, as well as reflects on life at home in this
period, the death of Stalin, and the craft of memoir writing.
Ginzburg, Eugenia. Within the Whirlwind.
Trans. Ian Boland. New York, 1981. 423 pp.
This is the sequel to Journey into the Whirlwind.
Ginzburg recounts her life after having
survived the Gulag, thanks to her assignment in the camp hospital, where she
meets her second husband, a camp physician. Sentenced to permanent exile in
the city of Magadan in the Soviet Far East, this book
describes the next 15 years of her life, her adoption of a daughter and return
to her profession as a teacher, and it continues the optimistic theme of faith
that StalinÕs wrongs will eventually be put right.
Gorbatov, Aleksandr V. Years Off My Life: The Memoirs of a General
of the Soviet Army, A.V. Gorbatov . New York, 1965. 222 pp.
A veteran of the army from 1912, Gorbatov
describes his early years, and his experiences in the Russian Revolution, Civil
War, and peacetime army. He was
arrested in 1937 in the general purge, served time in the Kolyma gold fields,
but was released in 1940 and reinstated, serving with distinction as a general
in the Red Army's offensive toward Berlin.
Gromyko, Andrei. Memories.
Translated by Harold Shukman. Foreword
by Henry Kissinger. New York, 1989. 414 pp.
Gromyko served as Khrushchev's foreign minister and
was a key figure in the diplomatic struggles of the Cold War, including the
Cuban Missile Crisis. His memoir
reflects on his life as a young communist in the revolution, his student days
in the 1930s, his service in the diplomatic corps in Washington during World
War II, and his many engagements as a diplomat in Europe, Africa, the Middle
East, and engaging with U.S. foreign policy.
Grossman, Vassili. The Years of War (1941-1945).
Moscow, 1946. Translated by Elizabeth Donnelly and
Rose Prokofiev. 451 pp.
Grossman served as a war correspondent throughout the
war, and his dispatches were reworked and collected in this publication that
celebrated the war effort of commanders and troops on the front-lines. He stayed with the troops through the
retreat of 1941, and witnessed the defense of Stalingrad in 1942-43, then
moving with the advancing Soviet Army to the west in 1944-45. He would later recast his war
experiences in a powerful novel, Life and
Fate, that
earned the ire of the Soviet censors in the 1970s. This personal narrative itself is very novelesque in its style.
Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich.
Khrushchev Remembers. Boston, 1970. Translated by Strobe Talbott.
639 pp.
Was it a hoax? The purported memoirs of the deposed
Soviet leader, dictated, taped, and smuggled to the west by KGB operatives, and
transcribed there by Strobe Talbott, a Time magazine journalist (later
President Clinton's adviser on Russia).
These juicy tidbits covered his early career and party work, including
his role in the great terror, the war, Stalin's last years, the 20th party
congress at which he began the process of destalinization, and Khrushchev's
encounters with the outside world, the first Soviet leader to travel abroad:
Korea, Tito, Suez, Berlin, China, Castro.
Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich.
Khrushchev Remembers: The Last Testament.
Translated by Strobe Talbott. Boston,
1974. 602 pp.
More Khrushchev tapes, released after the former
leader's death in 1971. Now verified by voice-print tests of the tapes
deposited at Columbia University, this volume discusses Khrushchev's firing of
Marshall Zhukov, scientists, the intelligentsia, domestic policies (housing and
the Virgin Lands), eastern Europe, China, travels in the developing world, his
encounters with Eisenhower, the U-2 incident, Kennedy, Berlin, and Cuba.
Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich.
Khrushchev Remembers: The Glasnost Tapes. Translated by Jerrold L. Schechter. Boston, 1990. 219 pp.
Still more Khrushchev, the bits that were too hot to
publish in the 1970s. NOT TO BE USED AS A PERSONAL NARRATIVE, but available to
supplement a reading of either of the two earlier Khrushchev memoirs. Covers the terror and 20th Party
Congress, the war, relations with west and east, Cuba and Berlin, and the intellientsia.
Maisky, Ivan. Memoirs
of a Soviet Ambassador: the War, 1939-43. New York, 1968.
408 pp.
Maisky served as the Soviet ambassador to Britain from 1933
to 1943. In this memoir, he recounts the phony war, Battle of Britain, the
invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, and the diplomatic struggle for a
second front. He was recalled to
Moscow in 1943, where the memoir ends.
Petkevich, Tamara. Memoir of a Gulag Actress. Translated by Yasha
Klots and Ross Ufberg.
DeKalb, 2010. 481 pp.
Born in 1920, the author spent 7 years in the Gulag
beginning in 1943, where she eventually managed to be assigned to a traveling
theatre troupe. The memoir recounts
her youth as a firm believer in Communism, followed by arrest in 1943 for
political crimes, and the conditions she endured in many camps across the
USSR. As a memoir of the Gulag,
this was hugely successful in post-Soviet Russia for its portrayal of the
prison experience and culture.
Shepilov, Dmitrii. The KremlinÕs Scholar: A Memoir of Soviet
Politics under Stalin and Khrushchev.
Translated by Anthony Austin. Edited by Stephen V. Bittner. New Haven, 2007. 404 pp.
Shepilov, Soviet success story, was born in Soviet Central
Asia in 1905, and rose to become a lawyer, economist, and Communist Party
official under Stalin and Khrushchev.
He survived the Stalin purges of the late 1940s and became a supporter
of Khrushchev, until he became disillusioned. Shepilov
joined an attempt to oust Khrushchev in 1957, and spent the rest of his career
out of power. The memoir was
written in the mid-1960s as a kind of self-justification.
Zhukov, Georgy. The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov. New York, 1971. 692 pp.
Zhukov emerged as the leader of the Red Army and
architect of its victory over the Germans in World War II. This memoir, highly censored, describes
his childhood and youth, his experience in World War I and the civil war as a
soldier, the peacetime army up to 1939, and his wartime experiences, ending
with the capture of Berlin in 1945.
IV. From
Dissidence to Perestroika to the Fall of the USSR
Alexeyeva, Ludmilla, and Paul
Goldberg, The Thaw Generation: Coming of
Age in the Post-Stalin Era. Pittsburgh, 1990. 339
pp.
Alexeyeva was a central player in the Ōkitchen cultureĶ of the
1960s that led to the movement for human rights in the 1970s, one of the most
notable of the dissident groupings. Her memoir recounts the
personal politics and personal lives of a brave and persecuted generation of
urban intellectuals.
Amalrik, Andrei. Involuntary Journey to Siberia. Translated by Manya Harari and Max Hayward. New York, 1970. 297 pp.
Amalrik was an early leader of the dissident movement, and
recounts in this memoir his experiences from 1965 of KGB surveillance,
interrogation, arrest, and exile to a Siberian village. His accounts of life on a collective
farm are among the most chilling in the literature. He was allowed to return to Moscow in
1966, and later was permitted to emigrate to western
Europe. (He was killed in an
automobile crash in Spain in 1980 on the way to a human rights conference.)
Amalrik, Andrei. Notes of a Revolutionary. Translated by Guy Daniels. New York, 1982. 343 pp.
This second installment of Amalrik's
reflections takes his story from his return to Moscow in 1966, describing the
underground cultural world of dissident Moscow, his repeated encounters with
KGB harassment and surveillance, another arrest, trial and exile in 1970, and
continuing battles with the KGB until he was exiled from the country in 1976.
Bukovsky, Vladimir. To
Build a Castle: My Life as a Dissenter. Translated by Michael Scammell. New York, 1979. 438 pp.
A leading Soviet dissident who spent much of his
adult life in prison, Bukovsky was released from prison in
exchange for Chilean political prisoners in 1976, at the age of 34. His perceptive memoir describes his
childhood and growing up in the late Khrushchev thaw, and his increasing
involvement in marginally acceptable activities such as a club for
nonconformist artists and youth festivals. He ran into trouble with the KGB beginning
in 1961, was expelled from the university and Young Communist League, arrested
in 1963, and released in 1965 as a mental patient. He joined the protests
against the repression of writers in 1966, and found himself in and out of jail
and psychiatric hospitals from then until his exchange in 1976.
Dobrynin, Anatoly.
In Confidence: Moscow's Ambassador
to America's Six Cold War Presidents.
New York, 1995. 672 pp.
Dobrynin served as the Soviet ambassador to the US from 1962
until 1986, and his memoir describes his experience dealing with Presidents
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, and Reagan.
Golyakhaovsky, Vladimir. Russian
Doctor. Translated by Michael Sylwester and
Eugene Ostrovsky. New York, 1984.
312 pp.
The author was an orthopedic surgeon who grew up and
was educated in late and post-Stalin USSR.
The memoir recounts his medical training, early career and family life,
dangers and opportunities of being a Jewish professional in the 1950s and
1960s. Provides a portrait of ŌnormalĶ
lives of the Soviet intelligentsia in a time of hope and renewal, and the
growing pressures that led many Jews to seek to leave the country. The author emigrated with his family in
1979.
Gorbachev, Mikhail. Memoirs. New York, 1996. 769 pp.
The last General Secretary of the Soviet Communist
Party and President of the Soviet Union tells his story. The last 600 pages concern his
activities as General Secretary from 1985 to 1991.
Gorokhova, Elena. A
Mountain of Crumbs: A Memoir. New York, 2009. 308
pp.
Gorokhova, who now lives in the US, describes her family,
childhood, and youth growing up in Leningrad in the 1960s and 1970s: family life, student life, sex life,
with stories about the experiences of her parents and grandparents also. She became seduced by the English
language at an early age and realized this could be her ticket out of the USSR. She emigrated with her American husband
in 1980.
Grigorenko, Petro. Memoirs.
Translated by Thomas P. Whitney. New York, 1982.
462 pp.
Grigorenko was a Ukrainian military man, joining the Red Army
in 1932 and serving first in the far east and then
distinguishing himself in World War II.
The bulk of his memoir concerns his growing disillusionment with the
Communist Party, his criticism of the party in 1961, arrest in 1964, and
involvement in the human rights movement after his release in 1966.
Gurevich, David. From
Lenin to Lennon: A Memoir of Russia in the Sixties. New
York, 1991. 307 pp.
Son of a Soviet Air Force officer, the author spent
his childhood on air bases around the country, finishing high school in the
small closed town of Syzran. The
memoir recounts his university years at the School of Foreign Languages in
Moscow in the 1960s, his obsession with rock and roll, his loves and family
quarrels, his work as an interpreter and translator, and his efforts to
emigrate. He left the USSR in 1976.
Kaminskaya, Dina. Final
Judgment: My Life as a Soviet Defense Attorney. Translated by . New York, 1982. 364 pp.
A look at the Soviet judicial
system as well as the inside story of an attorney who helped defend dissidents,
beginning with Vladimir Bukovsky in 1967. The memoir describes her law school education in the
1930s, the system of justice, and encounters with many of the leading moments
in the history of the Soviet opposition. She was expelled from the bar in 1971.
Khanga, Yelena, with Susan Jacoby. Soul to Soul: A Black Russian-American Family 1865-1992. New
York, 1992. 319 pp.
Daughter of an African-American communist woman who
came to the USSR with her parents in the 1930s, and an African politican, Khanga's memoir traces
her complicated family history (her grandparents included Russian Jews and
African-American planters in the south) and the story of growing up in Moscow
in the 1960s and 1970s, a Soviet teenager at the height of the Cold War. She studied journalism at Moscow State
University and became a working journalist in the period of glasnost.
Ligachev, Egor. Inside Gorbachev's Kremlin: The Memoirs of Yegor Ligachev. New York, 1993.
369 pp.
The number 2 man in the Kremlin during Gorbachev's
regime, Ligachev was known as a communist die-hard
and old-fashioned Soviet man. His memoir covers his arrival as a Kremlin
insider in 1983, his encounters with top-ranking communists, Gorbachev's regime
and the crises faced by Gorbachev's "misguided" policies.
Orlov, Yuri. Dangerous
Thoughts: Memoirs of a Russian Life. Translated by Thomas P. Whitney. New York, 1991. 348 pp.
One of the leaders of the human rights movement and
Helsinki Watch group in the 1960s through 1980s, Orlov
describes his upbringing in rural Russia, his experiences in the war as a
factory worker and then officer (he turned 18 in 1942). After the war, he was
tapped for the prestigious physics institute, but soon ran afoul of authorities
for "ideological impurity." He suffered eighteen years of exile to
Armenia, returning to Moscow in 1972 to plunge into the human rights movement.
He was sentenced several times to prison and labor camps, and finally left the
USSR in 1989.
Nekrich, Aleksandr. Forsake Fear: Memoirs of an Historian.
Translated by Donald Linebaugh. Boston,
1991. 293 pp.
Nekrich was trained as an historian in the early years of
the Cold War, participating in the efforts of Soviet historians to respond to
KhrushchevÕs Thaw and to revise the standard view of Soviet history. His controversial study of the 1941
German invasion, very critical of StalinÕs role, led to his expulsion from the
Institute of History and his association with the dissident movement of the
1960s and 1970s.
Pankin, Boris. The Last Hundred Days of the Soviet Union. London, 1996.
Translated by Alexei Pankin. 282 pp.
Pankin was appointed Gorbachev's foreign minister in
mid-1991, and his memoir recounts his attempts to maintain an activist foreign
policy in the months between the August 1991 coup that nearly toppled
Gorbachev, and the dissolution of the USSR on Christmas Day 1991, that removed
Gorbachev's country out from under him.
Among the activities Pankin recounts are human
rights negotiations, Middle East issues, and arms control.
Sakharov, Andrei. Memoirs.
Translated by Richard Lourie. New
York, 1990. 773 pp.
Physicist and developer of the hydrogen bomb in the
Soviet Union, Sakharov was also a great humanist and became the leading figure
in the human rights movement from the 1960s until his death in 1991. His memoir
recounts his childhood and youth, his wartime experience and involvement in the
nuclear physics group, his encounters with Khrushchev, the turning point of
1968, and his increasing participation in the human rights movement and
Helsinki Watch groups. During the
last years of the Brezhnev regime, he and his wife Elena Bonner were exiled to
the closed city of Gorky so that they could not communicate with western
journalists. They were permitted to return to Gorbachev to Moscow, and Sakharov
continued his activism as an elected member of the Congress of People's
Deputies in 1989, denouncing the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Shevardnadze, Eduard. The Future Belongs to Freedom.
Translated by Catherine A. Fitzpatrick. New York, 1991.
237 pp.
Shevardnadze served as Gorbachev's foreign minister
in developing the policy of
"New Thinking." He
resigned from Gorbachev's inner circle in 1991 after warning of an impending
coup d'etat against the perestroika policy, and
returned to his native Georgia, where he was eventually elected president. The memoir traces his life and political
career, focusing on his relationship with Gorbachev, the policy of New
Thinking, arms negotiations, Chernobyl, and the August 1991 coup against
Gorbachev.
Young, Cathy (Ekaterina Jung). Growing Up in Moscow: Memories of a Soviet Girlhood. New York, 1989.
The daughter of successful Moscow professionals,
Young left the USSR when her parents emigrated to the
US in 1980; she was seventeen. The memoir, written after she graduated from
Rutgers University in 1988, looks at growing up in socialist Moscow, school,
gender attitudes, sex and the Soviet teenager, and describes how she became a
"closet dissident," reading forbidden books and learning to think
freely.
Zyuganov, Gennady. My Russia: The Political Autobiography of Gennady Zyuganov. Ed. Vadim Medish.
Armonk, N.Y., 1997. 198 pp.
The political manifesto as well as autobiography of
the leader of the post-communist Communist Party, architect of the brown-red
coalitions that seriously challenged the electoral supremacy of Boris YeltsinÕs
reformers during the 1990s.
This is a document of a true party believer written during a period of
competition for political ideas.