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Title: Gulag Archipelago, Vol 2
Series: Gulag Archipelago
Author: Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Non-fiction
Pages: 648
Words: 276.5K
Synopsis: |
Containing Parts III & IV of Solzhenitsyn’s book, The Gulag Archipelago.
From Wikipedia.com
Structurally, the text comprises seven sections divided (in most printed editions) into three volumes: parts 1–2, parts 3–4, and parts 5–7. At one level, the Gulag Archipelago traces the history of the system of forced labor camps that existed in the Soviet Union from 1918 to 1956. Solzhenitsyn begins with V. I. Lenin’s original decrees which were made shortly after the October Revolution; they established the legal and practical framework for a series of camps where political prisoners and ordinary criminals would be sentenced to forced labor. The book then describes and discusses the waves of purges and the assembling of show trials in the context of the development of the greater Gulag system; Solzhenitsyn gives particular attention to its purposive legal and bureaucratic development.
The narrative ends in 1956 at the time of Nikita Khrushchev’s Secret Speech (“On the Personality Cult and its Consequences”). Khrushchev gave the speech at the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, denouncing Stalin’s personality cult, his autocratic power, and the surveillance that pervaded the Stalin era. Although Khrushchev’s speech was not published in the Soviet Union for a long time, it was a break with the most atrocious practices of the Gulag system.
Despite the efforts by Solzhenitsyn and others to confront the legacy of the Gulag, the realities of the camps remained a taboo subject until the 1980s. Solzhenitsyn was also aware that although many practices had been stopped, the basic structure of the system had survived and it could be revived and expanded by future leaders. While Khrushchev, the Communist Party, and the Soviet Union’s supporters in the West viewed the Gulag as a deviation of Stalin, Solzhenitsyn and many among the opposition tended to view it as a systemic fault of Soviet political culture – an inevitable outcome of the Bolshevik political project.
Parallel to this historical and legal narrative, Solzhenitsyn follows the typical course of a zek (a slang term for an inmate), derived from the widely used abbreviation “z/k” for “zakliuchennyi” (prisoner) through the Gulag, starting with arrest, show trial, and initial internment; transport to the “archipelago”; the treatment of prisoners and their general living conditions; slave labor gangs and the technical prison camp system; camp rebellions and strikes (see Kengir uprising); the practice of internal exile following the completion of the original prison sentence; and the ultimate (but not guaranteed) release of the prisoner. Along the way, Solzhenitsyn’s examination details the trivial and commonplace events of an average prisoner’s life, as well as specific and noteworthy events during the history of the Gulag system, including revolts and uprisings.
Solzhenitsyn also states:
Macbeth’s self-justifications were feeble – and his conscience devoured him. Yes, even Iago was a little lamb, too. The imagination and spiritual strength of Shakespeare’s evildoers stopped short at a dozen corpses. Because they had no ideology. Ideology – that is what gives evildoing its long-sought justification and gives the evildoer the necessary steadfastness and determination. That is the social theory which helps to make his acts seem good instead of bad in his own and others’ eyes…. That was how the agents of the Inquisition fortified their wills: by invoking Christianity; the conquerors of foreign lands, by extolling the grandeur of their Motherland; the colonizers, by civilization; the Nazis, by race; and the Jacobins (early and late), by equality, brotherhood, and the happiness of future generations… Without evildoers there would have been no Archipelago.
— The Gulag Archipelago, Chapter 4, p. 173
There had been works about the Soviet prison/camp system before, and its existence had been known to the Western public since the 1930s. However, never before had the general reading public been brought face to face with the horrors of the Gulag in this way. The controversy surrounding this text, in particular, was largely due to the way Solzhenitsyn definitively and painstakingly laid the theoretical, legal, and practical origins of the Gulag system at Lenin’s feet, not Stalin’s. According to Solzhenitsyn’s testimony, Stalin merely amplified a concentration camp system that was already in place. This is significant, as many Western intellectuals viewed the Soviet concentration camp system as a “Stalinist aberration”
My Thoughts: |
Where Volume 1 seemed mainly to be about the process of how the (fictional) legalities came into being that led to arrests and about the arrests and early detainment, this volume was all about the camps and the various kinds of people in the Gulag. The first 65% dealt exclusively with the camps, what went on in them, how the prisoners existed, how they lived (and died) what uses the camps were put too.
This was grueling. I started this particular volume back in August of last year and am just now finishing it up. So 5 months?
I wish I had profound things to write here but I don’t. Solzhenitsyn simply chronicles what has gone on and shows how some of it happened (people turning a blind eye, people letting it happen because it was happening to someone else, people letting it happen because they were afraid of it happening to them, people letting it happen because it was happening to a group they didn’t like) and the absolutely horrific costs of the camps. Make no mistake, the Gulags were death camps as sure as the Nazi camps were.
Solzhenitsyn also lets his own personality and biases show through quite a bit when he talks about the various kinds of people in the last part of the book. Any time a “thief” is mentioned (ie, a non-political offender for some actual crime), he really goes off against them. He makes no bones about how he survived his time (becoming an informer in the camps) and describes the very few kind of people who would refuse that (Christians being the main group).
Besides the weighty content, what also slowed me down was the references to things or people that I simply had no idea about or anyway to put them into context. Many times whole passages held almost no meaning for me because I didn’t know the people being talked about or the brand of Russian humor went winging its way over my head. Solzhenitsyn did have a dry, sarcastic kind of humor and I appreciated what I could understand. Whenever he talked about the language and how particular words grew out of the Gulag, he lost me there too.
I won’t go into the politics beyond to say that what we are seeing now in terms of our media organizations in lockstep with the current administration will be very familiar to anyone who has read this.
I am going to be taking an extended break before attempting Volume 3. I’ve got a bunch of other non-fiction books that have been just sitting on my kindle so it’s time to pay them some attention. And I can’t face another volume like this for awhile, it’s just too much.
Bit of a tonal shift from yesterday…out of interest, which media organisations do you feel are in step and which ones are out of step? I like to think my blog is firmly in step with the Biden administration, and I know they’re in lockstep with Alex’s blog too. It’s just all about getting the party line out about leps and critters right now…
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I got this one, Mr. Bookstooge. I just checked and it looks like you still have some skimmying to do before you are accepted into the lines of the authoritarian brotherhood of skull rocks and dremmies. Lil’ Scooty will be over to show you thy way. We need more teamwork out of you and not so independent. KZZT . . . out.
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Agreed.
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If y’all are part of some secret skull club and didn’t invite me, my feelings are going to be mighty hurt!
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The first rule of secret skull club is to leave comments on other blogs about secret skull club.
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I knew it! So, what do I have to do to join?
I absolutely secret clubs that aren’t secret…
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Ok, you’re in! But you have to post your acceptance on your blog! Only full public disclosure will convince us that you can keep a secret!
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I’m on it! I’ll try to get something up this weekend….
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You speak like this a lot. Is it made up lingo or something slang’y from the music world you inhabit? I’m guessing real as I just googled lil scooty and he’s some rap artist?
Team, team, team!
(that’s about all I’ve got in me for that 🙂 )
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Lil’ Scooty is news me! I guess if you can think of it, someone probably already did something with it. Geez, and I thought I was saying something new . . . you know what? The gallows with all that! I’m passing it back to Mr. Bookstooge to let you know when your probation period is up.
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That was deliberate on my part, as I knew this post was coming and I needed something to cheer myself up.
All of the big media I consider to be nothing but propaganda machines for the left (in america, now sure what terminology to use for other countries), even Fox news.
I get my news from newsmax.com and ntd.com
I’d definitely agree that you’re much more Biden while I’m on the Trump side.
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Never voted Republican or Democrat, have friends in both camps. But good to read a spread of news, right, even just to see what the other side are saying? Not in favour of trusting any one, two or even three sources…
I really only see the world in terms of what I read on Alex’s blog, the rest is just noise. Once you understand critters and leprechauns, the rest just drops into place…
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I would be disturbed if you HAD voted for either, as even my voting machines shouldn’t let you vote at all…
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Lizard people got my vote every time, gotta vote for my own…
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New Tang Dynasty network?
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That is Wu Tang Forever to you….
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That is the channel you watch?
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Not a chance. I’d rather be a brony than listen to wutangforever.
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Wait, you said yesterday that this was your trusted channel? How can I trust you if you lie so easily?
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No, I said NTD was the channel. I just said you had to pronounce it wu tang forever.
You can trust me that I won’t make secret deals with certain countries, unlike Hunter Biden….
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Hunter mades deal after deal with me. Shonky voting machines, Korean gunboats delivering massive dumps of ballots, Jewish space lazers; how do the Biden family come up with these eleborate, unlikely stories? Must be very frustrating for you to have such amateurs involved…
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That would explain a lot. Hunter is like a lot of young men of his generation who have had everything handed to them. They get lazy, their imagination stagnates and they just don’t know how to work for things.
Now, MY generation, we knew how to rig elections and space lazer people with style. Kids these days, got no style!
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His big mistake was putting the whole master-plan on his laptop and putting it in for repair. You don’t get Dr No doing that, do you?
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The Bidens should probably watch a couple of Bond films to get some pro tips.
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Well, according to you, they’re villians cut from the same cloth….
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Exactly. So watching some Bond films can only up their game.
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Is that the reality tunnel that newsmax have you scuttling through?
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You mean the truth? Then absolutely…
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And yet the Tang Dynasty Network report things differently. Could there be a world beyond Biden vs Trump, or Republican vs Democrat? Why can’t we all just, sniff sniff, get along?
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That sounds like hard work to get through Booky.
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Thanks for the implied sympathy, fraggle, it’s appreciated.
This was brutal. It’s not graphic or gory or disgusting, it’s just the most disheartening thing I’ve ever read, to date, as I’m seeing parallels in my supposedly democratic country.
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I think history ever repeats itself, I read a lot of Roman and Egyptian history and there are always so many parallels to be drawn.
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That sounds like an important but difficult read. Well done for pushing through. I can imagine needing a break before starting the next one.
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I am deliberately NOT thinking about the final volume 🙂 just so I’ll keep it on my kindle and eventually read it.
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Props to you for learning about history. As I said, I was interested in knowing about this one, so I’m assuming you did quite a bit of cross research for this one in digital format with the Kindle research tools? I’ve been digging that feature lately myself with Borderless.
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I did zero cross research. My kindle oasis is on permanent airplane mode so I can’t use features like that. I like the dictionary but any other feature is just too distracting for me.
Now, if I were to read a lot more non-fiction than I currently do, I think it would be an invaluable tool.
ps,
WP got back to me and they claimed to have flipped some switches and hexed some rabbits and stuff and claim that I should now get notifications from your site. I’ll be over later to leave a comment. But that will be a while as I’ve been offline for almost 24hrs and as such have a lot of catching up to do 😀
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Good to know we have potential news on that front.
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I’m similarly taking it very slowly reading Kolyma Stories by Shalamov, same subject matter. It’s been two years for me, already. Still, it is a solid 5+ star read, among the very best books I’ve ever read.
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Do you think you’ll eventually review it? Or just let it be?
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I’ll review it for sure.
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thumbs up
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Found some bands that not only drew inspiration from these events but also used the covers of these books(or possibly the foto it originated from)… cant say Ill be sharing that on any metal mondays…
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Really? They used the covers eh? That’s actually pretty gutsy.
Are the bands not metal enough for metal monday?
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Scary stuff man like real creepy sounding distortion mixed with recordings of actual people in mental institutions going off… maybe do it for halloween, but that stuff aint a joke.. do not want to be known as that guy making light of very dark things…
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Whoa, that is creepy. Yeah, I can see why you wouldn’t want that up on your blog….
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I mean, i dont mind, but i am prone to stumble upon the dark web side of metal often… i do not know if the people that visit my page will ever be ready for that kind of thing, i dont even think i am, but i am interested in it though, i do not know why. Is it artistry or is the artist that mental himself? Actually one of the bands are or have been clinically ill and was institutionalized so yeah… for both our sakes ill skip that kinda thing on here…
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A heavy and insightful read, it seems. It’s interesting to hear about Russian humour and how it’s not easy to indulge and appreciate, at least most of the time. I wonder what volume 3 explores. It’s still nice to know how “mandatory” this trilogy is so far. Thanks for sharing your arduous journey with it with us! 😀
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Always glad to spread the word.
Now that this is behind me and I’m not being weighed down by it, I too am kind of curious what the final book will cover.
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