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Victor Serge : the course is set on hope / Susan Weissman.

Van Pelt Library CS71.F5897 2001
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Weissman, Susan, 1949-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Serge, Victor, 1890-1947.
Serge, Victor.
Physical Description:
xvii, 364 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Place of Publication:
London ; New York : Verso, 2001.
Summary:
Revolutionary novelist and historian, erstwhile anarchist, Bolshevik, dissident, Left Oppositionist ... Victor Serge is one of the most compelling figures to have emerged from the history of the Soviet Union. A lucid observer and a great writer, his is the story of a course set on hope, a pursuit of truth, dignity and human justice set against some of the most momentous events of the twentieth century.
Born Victor Kibalchich, the son and nephew of Russian revolutionary populists, Serge spent his first fifteen years in Belgium and was twenty-eight before he set foot in his homeland in 1919. Within months he had joined the Bolsheviks, and went on to participate in the first three Congresses of the Comintern, fight in the siege of Petrograd and work on various party assignments, both at home and abroad. In 1925, after the defeat of the German October, he returned to the Soviet Union to stand with the Left Opposition. A sort of permanent political oppositionist, Serge's refusal to side with either capitalism or Stalinism assured his marginality and consigned him to a life of persecution and poverty: after years of frequent and vicious arrests, he was expelled from Russia in 1936; four years later when the Wehrmacht arrived in Paris he was forced to flee to Marseilles; finally he was granted an exit visa and went to Mexico, where he died in poverty in 1947.
Throughout his life, Serge wrote prolifically and tellingly of his times: novels, short stories and novellas as well as biographies of Lenin, Stalin and Trotsky and an enormous archive of unpublished work including correspondence, polemics and essays. Susan Weissman's appreciation of these works and understanding of Serge's life reveal the extraordinary commitment and hope of a great political writer and activist whose views so often reflect the significant historical struggles of our own time.
Contents:
Part I In the orbit of revolution
1 In the service of the Revolution: 1917-21 11
2 Blockaded in Berlin; neutralized in Vienna; and into the Soviet fray 52
3 Back in the USSR - the Left Opposition struggles 1926-28 74
4 Stalinization 1928-33: the bureaucratic counter-revolution, solitary struggles in precarious freedom 109
5 Orenburg 1933-36, interrogation and deportation: digging the graves of the Revolution 144
Part II Another exile and two more: the final years
6 Out of Russia, cornered in Europe 185
7 From Paris to Marseilles, Marseilles to Mexico: the long, last journey from nightmare to refuge 238
8 From Mexico, whither the USSR, the world? 264.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [319]-347) and index.
ISBN:
1859849873
OCLC:
47971503

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