Among the least-chronicled aspects of post World War II European
intellectual and cultural history is the story of the Russian
intelligentsia after Stalin. Young Soviet veterans had returned
from the heroic struggle to defeat Hitler only to confront the
repression of Stalinist society. The world of the intelligentsia
exerted an attraction for them, as it did for many recent
university graduates. In its moral fervor and its rejection of
authoritarianism, this new generation of intellectuals resembled
the nineteenth-century Russian intelligentsia that had been crushed
by revolutionary terror and Stalinist purges. The last
representatives of the Russian intelligentsia, heartened by
Khrushchev s denunciation of Stalinism in 1956, took their
inspiration from the visionary aims of their nineteenth-century
predecessors and from the revolutionary aspirations of 1917. In
pursuing the dream of a civil, democratic socialist society, such
idealists contributed to the political disintegration of the
communist regime.
Vladislav Zubok turns a compelling subject into a portrait as
intimate as it is provocative. The highly educated elite those who
became artists, poets, writers, historians, scientists, and
teachers played a unique role in galvanizing their country to
strive toward a greater freedom. Like their contemporaries in the
United States, France, and Germany, members of the Russian
intelligentsia had a profound effect during the 1960s, in sounding
a call for reform, equality, and human rights that echoed beyond
their time and place.
Zhivago s children, the spiritual heirs of Boris Pasternak s
noble doctor, were the last of their kind an intellectual and
artistic community committed to a civic, cultural, and moral
mission.
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