Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 364
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-1145-3 • Hardback • September 2001 • $154.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7425-1146-0 • Paperback • August 2001 • $69.00 • (£53.00)
978-1-4616-1538-5 • eBook • August 2001 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Veronica Shapovalov is associate professor of Russian at San Diego State University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 PART I: Nonconformity, Resistance, and Protest
Chapter 3 My Autobiography
Chapter 4 Why Weren't You Crying?
Chapter 5 Memoirs of Brusilova, by E. Selezneva
Chapter 6 From the Protocol of Interrogation
Chapter 7 You Would Make a Good Joan of Arc
Chapter 8 How I Became an Anarchist
Chapter 9 The Prison Transport in Wartime
Chapter 10 My Meetings with Anna Petrovna Skripnikova
Chapter 11 Perspective
Part 12 PART II: Camp As a Way of Life
Chapter 13 Episodes from My Life
Chapter 14 Life Is Everywhere
Chapter 15 From Aelita's Notes
Chapter 16 Epiphany in the Taiga
Chapter 17 From Letters
Chapter 18 Letters
Part 19 PART III: Sisters, Moms, and Broads
Chapter 20 From Letters
Chapter 21 Satyr and Nymphs
Chapter 22 The Hold
Chapter 23 I Never Saw Him Again
Chapter 24 Unedited Life
This collection of memoirs and letters from the gulags will prove to be of great interest to scholars working on the Stalin era and for students who are interested in the terror. . . . This is a highly satisfactory book that anyone teaching Soviet history should read.
— The Russian Review
A major contribution to the literature on the Soviet women's history and on the outrages of the Stalin period. The excerpts are eloquent, the writers memorable. Even those well acquainted with the horrors of the Stalin years will find themselves shaken by this array of needless tragedies.
— Feminist Formations
The collection is well introduced, meticulously footnoted, and skillfully translated. . . . All the accounts are compelling.
— Choice Reviews