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Loading... Gulag: A Historypor Anne Applebaum
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adorará Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se gostará deste livro. A powerful and important book. While this is a big book, and the early chapters, discussing the bad things which went on in Stalin's gulags, are not fun to read, the book is actually very interesting when it gets to discussing how the labor camps came to end and how they are viewed by Russians today. This is an important book, since the world should know of and deprecate the awfulness of Stalin's slave labor camps, fueled by the terrible injustices customarily dealt out by the Stalin system. It won the Pulitzer prize for nonfiction for 2004, and is the 25th such winner I have read. Applebaum's history of the Gulag is encyclopedic and for that reason is exhausting to read. She shows the evolution of the institution from a (by later standards, gentle) prison for politicals who offered competition to the Bolsheviki, through a slave labor system for building actual Socialism, through a stage where the Gulag played a key role in the terror campaign against all elements of the Soviet population before subsiding once more into a slave labor system, this time for the unfortunates caught up in the Great Patriotic War. Applebaum then explores step by step the elements of the Gulag from arrest orders through interrogation, "trial", transport and emprisonment. In this section she clearly shows how a regime that places no value on human lives as anything beyond units of labor debases all it touches. Applebaum writes a stuffed book about one of the Soviet Union’s worst things – to lock people up on very dubious accounts. This heavy book ought to be an eye-opener for everyone. At least myself had not grasped the width – and the organisation – of these crimes (against humanity?) committed in the name of communism! The historian Applebaum writes well, easily accessible. But still, something is missing. I can’t put my finger on it, but perhaps it is a bit of passion, or force I crave. But sure – it is awful things she brings to light. --- Applebaum skriver en späckad bok om ett av Sovejtunionens värsta företeelser - att spärra in folk på mycket grumliga grunder. Denna tunga skrift borde vara en ögonöppnare för alla. Åtminstone jag hade inte koll på vidden - och systematiseringen - av dessa i kommunismens namn begågna brott (mot mänskligheten?)! Historikern Applebaum skriver bra, lättillgängligt. Men ändå fattas något. Jag har svårt att sätta fingret på det, men kanske är det lite glöd, eller driv jag saknar. Men visst - det är ju förfärliga (i ordets rätta bemärkelse) saker hon tar upp. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
Referências a esta obra em recursos externos.
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Amnesty for Polish citizens in the Soviet Union Criticisms of Communist party rule | Human rights in the Soviet Union Japanese prisoners of war in the Soviet Union | Punitive psychiatry in the Soviet Union |
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The Gulag—the vast array of Soviet concentration camps—was a system of repression and punishment whose rationalized evil and institutionalized inhumanity were rivaled only by the Holocaust.
The Gulag entered the world’s historical consciousness in 1972, with the publication of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s epic oral history of the Soviet camps, The Gulag Archipelago. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, dozens of memoirs and new studies covering aspects of that system have been published in Russia and the West. Using these new resources as well as her own original historical research, Anne Applebaum has now undertaken, for the first time, a fully documented history of the Soviet camp system, from its origins in the Russian Revolution to its collapse in the era of glasnost. It is an epic feat of investigation and moral reckoning that places the Gulag where it belongs: at the center of our understanding of the troubled history of the twentieth century.
Anne Applebaum first lays out the chronological history of the camps and the logic behind their creation, enlargement, and maintenance. The Gulag was first put in place in 1918 after the Russian Revolution. In 1929, Stalin personally decided to expand the camp system, both to use forced labor to accelerate Soviet industrialization and to exploit the natural resources of the country’s barely habitable far northern regions. By the end of the 1930s, labor camps could be found in all twelve of the Soviet Union’s time zones. The system continued to expand throughout the war years, reaching its height only in the early 1950s. From 1929 until the death of Stalin in 1953, some 18 million people passed through this massive system. Of these 18 million, it is estimated that 4.5 million never returned.
But the Gulag was not just an economic institution. It also became, over time, a country within a country, almost a separate civilization, with its own laws, customs, literature, folklore, slang, and morality. Topic by topic, Anne Applebaum also examines how life was lived within this shadow country: how prisoners worked, how they ate, where they lived, how they died, how they survived. She examines their guards and their jailers, the horrors of transportation in empty cattle cars, the strange nature of Soviet arrests and trials, the impact of World War II, the relations between different national and religious groups, and the escapes, as well as the extraordinary rebellions that took place in the 1950s. She concludes by examining the disturbing question why the Gulag has remained relatively obscure, in the historical memory of both the former Soviet Union and the West.
Gulag: A History will immediately be recognized as a landmark work of historical scholarship and an indelible contribution to the complex, ongoing, necessary quest for truth.
(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)
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