Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
Face
(London, 2012)
Graeme
Gill
and
Roger
D.
Ma r k w i c k ,
Russia’s Stillborn
Democracy? From Gorbachev to
Yeltsin
(Oxford, 2000)
Yves Hamant,
Alexander Men: A
Witness
for
Contemporary
Russia
(Torrance, Calif., 1995)
Stephen
Handelman,
Comrade
Criminal: Russia’s New Mafiya
(New Haven, 1995)
Albert Heard,
The Russian Church
and Russian Dissent
(London,
1887)
Mikhail
Heller
and
Aleksandr
Nekrich,
Utopia in Power: The
History of the Soviet Union from
1917 to the Present
(London,
1986)
David
Hoffman,
The Oligarchs
(London, 2011)
Robert
Horvath,
The Legacy of
Soviet
Dissent:
Dissidents,
Democratisation and Radical
Nationalism in Russia
(London,
2005)
Grigory
Ioffe
and
Tatyana
N e f e d o v a ,
Continuity
and
Change in Rural Russia: A
Geographical
Perspective
(Boulder, Col., 1997)
Grigory Ioffe, Tatyana Nefedova
and Ilya Zaslavsky,
The End of
Peasantry? The Disintegration of
Rural Russia
(Pittsburgh, 2006)
David Joravsky,
The Lysenko Affair
(Chicago, 1986)
Oleg Kalugin,
Spymaster: My 32
Years
in
Intelligence
and
Espionage against the West
(London, 1994)
Ryszard
Kapuscinski,
Imperium
(London, 2007)
Halik
Kochanski,
The
Eagle
Unbowed: Poland and the Poles
in the Second World War
(London, 2012)
Stephen Kotkin,
Steeltown U S S R:
Soviet Society in the Gorbachev
Era
(Berkeley, 1991)
Stephen
Kotkin,
Magnetic
Mountain:
Stalinism
as
a
Civilization
(Berkeley, 1995)
Stephen
Kotkin,
Armageddon
Averted: The Soviet Collapse
1970–2000
(Oxford, 2008)
Richard
Lourie,
Sakharov:
A
Biography
(London, 2002)
Wolfgang Lutz, Sergei Scherbov
and Andrei
Volkov
(eds.),
Demographic
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and
Patterns in the Soviet Union
before 1991
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A.
Malenky,
Magnitogorsk: The
Magnitogorsk
Metallurgical
Combine of the Future
(Moscow,
1932)
Nick
Manning
and
Nataliya
Tikhonova
(eds.),
Health and
Health Care in the New Russia
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David Marples,
The Collapse of the
Soviet Union, 1985–91
(Harlow,
2004)
Mervyn
Matthews,
Patterns
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Deprivation in the Soviet Union
under Brezhnev and Gorbachev
(Stanford, 1989)
Catherine Merridale,
Night of Stone:
Death and Memory in Russia
(London, 2000)
Fyodor
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Gulag Boss
(Oxford, 2011)
George
Orwell,
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Richard
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(London, 2010)
Boris
Pasternak,
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Donald
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Hangmen
(London, 2004)
Keith Richards,
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T.
H.
Rigby
(ed.),
The Stalin
Dictatorship:
Khrushchev’s
‘Secret
Speech’
and
Other
Documents
(Sydney, 1968)
Elizabeth Roberts and Ann Shukman
( e d s . ) ,
Christianity
for
the
Twentieth Century: The Life and
Work
of
Alexander
Men
(London, 1996)
Abraham Rothberg,
The Heirs of
Stalin: Dissidence and the Soviet
Regime 1953–1970
(Ithaca, NY,
1972)
Angus Roxburgh,
The Strongman
(London, 2012)
Joshua Rubenstein and Alexander
Gribanov (eds.),
The K G B File
on Andrei Sakharov
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2005)
Theo J. Schulte,
The German Army
and Nazi Policies in Occupied
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(Oxford, 1989)
John Scott,
Behind the Urals: An
American Worker in Russia’s
City of Steel
(Bloomington, Ind.,
1973)
Simon Sebag Montefiore,
Young
Stalin
(London, 2007)
Robert Service,
Stalin: A Biography
(London, 2004)
L.
Sitko,
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Stikhi
i
vospominaniya
byshikh
zaklyuchennihk Minlaga (Intalia:
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Prisoners of the Mineral Camp
,
Inta, 1995)
Timothy
Snyder,
Bloodlands
(London, 2011)
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn,
Cancer
Ward
(London, 1968)
Alexander Solzhenitsyn,
Arkhipelag
Gulag (The Gulag Archipelago
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Moscow, 1990)
Francis
Spufford,
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(London, 2011)
William Taubman,
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(New York,
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Olga Semyonova Tian-Shanskaia,
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(Bloomington,
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William Tompson,
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Mark
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Sergiev Posad, 2005)
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HIV/AIDS in
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Tim
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The Forsaken:
From the Great Depression to
the Gulags: Hope and Betrayal
in Stalin’s Russia
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2008)
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Timothy
Ware,
The
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Frank Westerman,
Engineers of the
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Stephen White,
Russia Goes Dry:
Alcohol,
State
and
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(Cambridge, 1996)
Michael Wieck,
A Childhood under
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‘Certified’ Jew
(London, 2003)
Venedikt
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Venedikt
Yerofeyev,
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These are specific references, listed
by chapter, to works mentioned
in the text.
INTRODUCTION: WE WILL
BURY YOU
The reference to the king rejecting
Islam comes from Heard’s
Russian
Church and Russian Dissent
. The
statistics
on
relative
alcohol
consumption come from Eberstadt,
Russia’s Peacetime Demographic
Crisis
. The figures for the increase in
Russia’s consumption of alcoholic
drinks from 1940 to 1984 come
from White,
Russia Goes Dry
.
The ‘we will bury you’ comment
and the background to Khrushchev
saying it are from Taubman’s
biography of the Soviet leader.
The information on Sinyavsky
and Daniel comes from
On Trial
,
edited by Labedz and Hayward. The
Alexeyeva book quoted is her
excellent
Soviet Dissent
.
Transparency
International’s
corruption perceptions index is
available
on
the
organization’s
website cpi.transparency.org, and the
Levada Centre’s survey is on
along
with
a
fascinating
array
of
other
investigations.
CHAPTER 1: THEY TOOK OUR
GRANDFATHER’S LAND
The quotes from Father Dmitry are
mainly taken from his
Podarok ot
Boga
.
The eyewitness account of pre-
revolutionary village life comes from
Tian-Shanskaia’s
Village Life in Late
Tsarist Russia
. Other useful books
on peasant life include the early parts
of Figes’s
A People’s Tragedy
, plus
the early chapters of the following
books on the famine.
These
are
Conquest’s
The
Harvest of Sorrow
, Davies and
Wheatcroft’s
The Years of Hunger
and
Stalin’s Peasants
by Fitzpatrick.
Snyder’s
Bloodlands
is magnificent
for collectivization, famine and the
violence of the war, while Ioffe and
Nefedova’s
Continuity and Change
in Rural Russia
was also a major
source.
The fate of the Jews is described
in Altshuler’s
Soviet Jewry on the
Eve of the Holocaust
and Arad’s
The
Holocaust in the Soviet Union
. The
general origins and effects of anti-
Semitism
are
touched
on
in
Butterworth’s
The World that Never
Was
. Accounts of the mass rape
inflicted by Soviet soldiers when
they captured towns in World War
Two are legion. Among them are
those in Applebaum’s
Iron Curtain
.
CHAPTER 2: A DOUBLE-DYED
ANTI-SOVIET
For details on Stalin’s deal with the
Orthodox Church, see Service’s
biography of the dictator, as well as
the books by Jane Ellis. The quote
asking where all the priests have
gone is from Trofimchuk,
Akademia
u
Troitsy
,
the
Sergiev
Posad
seminary’s official history.
The details of production of food
on private plots come from Ioffe and
Nefedova’s
Continuity and Change
in
Rural
Russia
.
The
quote
expressing amazement about Hagia
Sophia is from Heard’s
The Russian
Church and Russian Dissent
. The
details about Pavlik Morozov are
from
Orlando
Figes’s
The
Whisperers
. The narrative of the
gulag
is
largely
taken
from
Applebaum’s
Gulag
.
The Lenin comment is from
Volume 35 of his collected works, as
quoted in Andrew and Mitrokhin,
The Mitrokhin Archive
, which is also
the source for the details on K G B
penetration of the Church.
CHAPTER 3: FATHER DMITRY
WAS K-956
Details on the gulag are from
A p p leb au m ’s
Gulag
and
from
Solzhenitsyn’s
Gulag Archipelago
.
CHAPTER 4: THE GENERATION
OF CHANGE
For information on the protest
against
the
invasion
of
Czechoslovakia,
see
Gorbanevskaya’s
Red Square at
Noon
. The Khrushchev secret speech
can be found in Rigby’s
The Stalin
Dictatorship
. The Leonid Plyushch
quotes come from Fireside’s
Soviet
Psychoprisons
.
Information
on
writers’ roles under Stalin can be
found in Westerman’s
Engineers of
the Soul
.