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Today's piece has Bill extolling the anti-communist power of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago, and noting the loudest critics have the most to lose by its widespread publication.
What The Gulag Archipelago still teaches, 50 years later. A review of March 1917: The Red Wheel, Node III, Book 3, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, translated by Marian Schwartz. A vivid depiction of ...
Like many who lived in the Soviet Union in the 1970s, I have a personal relationship with Alexander Solzhenitsyn ... novella that brilliantly introduced Gulag vernacular to Russian literature ...
In Fall 2010, the Havighurst Center chose to explore the history of the Gulag as its semester-long focus ... The abridged edition of Solzhenitsyn's hauntingly intimate portrait of his own arrest, ...
How many died? There is no accurate answer. Applebaum “reluctantly” gives a figure of 2,749,163, although it is probably an ...
Actor Alexander Filippenko said that a literary and music evening devoted to the 95th anniversary of Alexander Solzhenitsyn ... “At first I read the Gulag Archipelago, then In the First ...
Alexander Isaevich Solzhenitsyn. Actor Yevgeny Mironov shares his memories of meetings with him. Solzhenitsyn's friend Nikita Struve talks about how he published The GULAG Archipelago abroad.