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The Voices of the Dead: Stalin's Great Terror in the 1930s

by Hiroaki Kuromiya

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Product Description

Swept up in the maelstrom of Stalin’s Great Terror of 1937–1938, nearly a million people died. Most were ordinary citizens who left no records and as a result have been completely forgotten. This book is the first to attempt to retrieve their stories and reconstruct their lives, drawing upon recently declassified archives of the former Soviet Secret Police in Kiev. Hiroaki Kuromiya uncovers in the archives the hushed voices of the condemned, and he chronicles the lives of dozens of individuals who shared the same dehumanizing fate: all were falsely arrested, executed, and dumped in mass graves.

 

Kuromiya investigates the truth behind the fabricated records, filling in at least some of the details of the lives and deaths of ballerinas, priests, beggars, teachers, peasants, workers, soldiers, pensioners, homemakers, fugitives, peddlers, ethnic Russians, Ukrainians, Poles, Germans, Koreans, Jews, and others. In recounting the extraordinary stories gleaned from the secret files, Kuromiya not only commemorates the dead and forgotten but also proposes a new interpretation of Soviet society that provides useful insights into the enigma of Stalinist terror.

 




All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4 out of 5 stars
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:

4 out of 5 starsWritten record of totalitarian terror, 2007-12-24
Professor Kuromiya has produced a work on a topic much covered in historical literature: Stalin's reign of terror. What Kuromiya adds is
a record of the original sources of documentation kept by the Soviet
secret police. These notes offer "bureaucratically efficient" records of
each prisoner's dialogue with captors, interrogators and torturers.
The language is bland, like a record from the motor vehicles bureau. But the context of these notes, the hidden torments, truths and lies they reveal, is chilling. Kuromiya's familiarity with the archival records allows him to infer pieces of "truth" amidst the vast conspiracy of offical lies. The records themselves are dry, even mundane, but the story thy tell, and that Kuromiya retells, is one of life, truth and, ultimately, of injustice and death.




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