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Paperback Memoirs of 1984 Book

ISBN: 0819191981

ISBN13: 9780819191984

Memoirs of 1984

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Book Overview

A former Soviet scientist and political prisoner now living in America, Yuri Tarnopolsky tells the story of his quest to understand Russia. In 1983 he was tried on charges of defaming the Soviet system: he had become a refusenik activist who defended the right to emigrate. He spent the Orwellian year of 1984 in a Siberian labor camp, and he compares Orwell's predictions with reality. As a scientist, Tarnopolsky is interested in broader facts and generalizations. He supports the view that Soviet communism was a natural continuation of Russian history. Tarnopolsky describes the pyramidal structure of Soviet society, its origin, and gives his own interpretation of the fall of the Soviet empire and the current Russian crossroads.
Scenes of life in a labor camp alternate with memories of the past, essays on the totalitarian society, Russian mentality, modern Jewish problems, references to current American reality, psychology of isolation, ideology, moral choices, freedom, social and individual evolution, order and chaos, and complexity. This book is the first memoir of its kind ever to be written originally in English and addressed to the Western reader.
Also being published by University Press of America, Unfinished Journey is Nancy Rosenfeld's personal story of her involvement with the campaign to free Yuri.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Behind barbed wire, behind the iron curtain

Tarnopolsky delivers a haunting tale of human rights in the Soviet Union. The story focuses on the author's imprisonment and battle with the Soviet government to grant him emigration from the USSR. The first-person narrative focuses with chilling detail on describing the author's experience in the Soviet Labor Camps. However, Tarnopolsky constantly shifts from the first-person-narrative to philosophical drivel on the nature of man that sometimes seems like he's using up space.
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