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![]() Works of Soviet Literature summarized for those unable or too lazy to read them in the original. |
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SIBERIA (Book One) by Georgi Mokeevich Markov (1973) Click Here for Book Two |
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![]() One of the great rivers of Siberia, flowing generally north approximately 2,300 mi (3,700 km) into an estuary on the Artic Ocean. With its chief tributary, the Irtysh River, it forms the world's fourth-longest river (approximately 3,460 mi/5,600 km). Although frozen for almost half the year and subject to flooding in its middle course, the Ob is a major trade and transportation route. Novosibirsk and Barnaul are the chief ports. Source: Encyclopedia.com Tell them ![]() sent you! |
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SONG OF DEMOCRACY From the Lena, Biya and Yenisei For the sake of freedom and labor Hungering for a brighter future We have gathered here And with a smile recalling The expanse of Baikal, the shining Altai All to our nation, our nation dear We send our greeting, summoning All who are with us into a common file Every comrade here is equal Shout it louder, our hearty toast Our first toast, to Siberia Its beauty and vast size And the second toast to the people, To that sacred slogan "Forward"--Forward! |
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( 1711 - 1765 ) ![]() Russian poet, scientist, and grammarian who is often considered the first great Russian linguistic reformer. He also made substantial contributions to the natural sciences, reorganized the St. Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences, established in Moscow the university that today bears his name, and created the first colored glass mosaics in Russia. Source: Britannica.com Tell them ![]() sent you! |
![]() Decembrists and the Russian Intelligentsia and Decembrists in Irkutsk then take the Decembrists Quiz Tell them ![]() sent you! |
![]() History of the Tungus People (also called the Evenk) Tell them ![]() sent you! |
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![]() Old Believers then visit the Old Believers Museum Tell them ![]() sent you! |
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"Like a mighty oak which becomes stronger when withered branches are cut off in time, the Party of the working class became stronger and more robust as a result of the exclusion of the Mensheviks." From "Istoriya Kommunisticheskoi Partii Sovetskogo Soyuza", Moscow, 1973. |
![]() Illustration by: Tatyana Vorobyova |
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Nikolai Gavrilovich Chernyshevsky (1828-1889), began his journalistic career in 1853 on the Petersburg journal Sovremennik, the leading radical publication of the time. In 1862, following student riots, he was arrested and sentenced to seven years hard labor in Siberia to be followed by permenant exile. During those first seven years, which he call the "best" of his life, he wrote the novel "What Is To Be Done?", one of Lenin's favorites. |
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![]() Stolypin's Land Reforms Tell them ![]() sent you! |
![]() Peasant Rebel Stenka Razin And Listen to: The Ballad of Stenka Razin (Stenka tosses his wife overboard to keep the troops happy.) Tell them ![]() sent you! |
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SOLDIERS POEM The soldiers go to battle! They go with no complaint, They go no matter what. They go boldly.... But at home, small children And their orphaned wives Are still unemployed. The government soldiers Occasionally gnaw on dry bread With a carefree smile And with swampy water.... ...And in entire regiments Under heavy bombardment, For the honor of Mother Russia, Like flies the soldiers die. They lie together in groups Pierced corpses, For the honor of Mother Russia, The unlucky soldiers. ...For the honor of Mother Russia Priests say prayers And forgetting the teachings of Christ Call for other to enlist. ...The time of peace will come, And all the rich land Will pass you by, boys, Worker-soldiers! The landlords will take it all And leave you crosses on your graves. And you'll remain naked Because you laid down your lives For the honor of Mother Russia, Brave soldiers! |
The path for the future which this person has described...will lead only to new sufferings and misfortunes, to the pauperization of thousands and millions of more peasants!Zatunaiskaya's face distorts in a horrible grimace. She scratches her own face to blood and lets out a terrifying scream. This so frightens the peasants that they all rush to the exits and out onto the street.
The situation on the front is desperate; the soldiers are tormented, exhausted. It is becoming clearer to them that the war will not bring the Russian people any salvation from its centuries of suffering. The time will soon come when their weapons will be turned against the tsar and the capitalists, those truly responsible for the unheard of suffering of our people!
There is only one way out. The workers, soldiers and peasants must throw out their insane leaders, take power into their own hands, immediately conclude a peace, and give the land to the peasants and the factories to the workers!
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Read the works of: ![]() Pushkin in Russian Pushkin in English Tell them ![]() sent you! |
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Markov, Georgi Mokeevich. Born on 19 April 1911, near Tomsk, Siberia. He authored the novels Strogovi, Father and Son, Salt of the Earth, Siberia, and To The Future Age. The first chapters of the novel Strogovi which chronicles the adjustments of Siberian peasants to the new Soviet power, were published in the almanac "Novaya Sibir" and elicited an extremely hostile reaction from the central press. Literaturnoye Obozreniye denounced them, saying "Markov writes with the impudence of a villiage hooligan." One of Markov's early defenders, however, was the Siberian poet Ivan Ivanovich Molchanov-Sibirsky. In October 1958, as one of the secretaries of the Writers Union, he gave a report to the Presidium, demanding Pasternak's ouster from the Union following his winning the Nobel Prize. By 1967 he had obviously outgrown the "village hooligan" label. He was an active participant in the crackdown at the Writers Congress of that year. In 1969 he was among those voting to kick Solzhenitsyn out of the Writers Union. "Siberia" was published in two parts in the journal Znamya; Part One in 1971 (issues No. 3-4), and Part Two in 1973 (issues No. 6-7). He was made First Secretary of the Writers Union on 20 July 1971. He enjoyed an unusually warm relationship with Leonid Brezhnev. On 25 February 1976, at the 25th Party Congress, he began his remarks thusly: "The deep, wise report of Comrade Leonid Ilych Brezhnev, suffused with a Leninist analysis of the contemporary world, contains a gigantic, immeasurable energy of inspiration. As if along wires, this energy has jolted into the hearts of people, inspiring them to work and great achievements." In April 1979 he personally gave Leonid Brezhnev the Lenin Prize for Literature for Brezhnev's books Malaya Zemlya, Rebirth, and Virgin Land, saying that these works "had an enormous influence on all types and genres of literature". It was during his tenure as head of the Writers Union that the Central Committee issued its decree of 8 October 1979 "On the Responsibility of Chief Editors for the Ideological and Artistic Content of Works Published." In the 1980s, a statue of Markov was erected in his Siberian home town and small museum dedicated to his life and works was opened. Between 1981 and 1985 print runs of Markov's works were 4,129,000. In 1986, his final novel, "To The Future Age", appeared in Zamnya. The prototype for the positive hero of this novel was Politburo member Egor Ligachev during the time he worked as a Party Secretary in the Tomsk Oblast. At the Party Congress in March 1986, Markov said he did not see the need for more glasnost in Soviet society. At a press conference, he opposed publishing "Dr. Zhivago". In June of 1986, he retired from the post of First Secretary of the Writers Union. In September 1991, a Polish newspaper published a story on the Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov, who was supposedly killed in London with a poisoned umbrella. They mistakenly accompanied the article with a picutre of our Georgy Markov, the Soviet writer. The newspaper, of course, published an apology and, strange as it may seem, a few days later, Georgy Mokeevich Markov died. During his lifetime, he was awarded the Hero of Socialist Labor medal. |

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