The Oak and the Calf: Sketches of Literary Life in the Soviet Union

by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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The author recounts his ten-year struggle with the government of his native Russia in his attempts to have his works published in his own country.

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This is my second reading of this memoir by Solzhenitsyn. I enjoyed it much less than my recollection of my first reading. His path through a censored press to publish his only work in the Soviet Union, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, in the periodical Novy Mir ends up being a bitchy recollection of how he outsmarted, out-willed, and largely stayed one step ahead of dimension-less bureaucrats. Although we have here a gifted novelist, he seems unable to get past his own crowing to explore contradictory motivations and nuances in the thought processes of his adversaries. This book tells us how his manipulations allowed him to publish in the West Cancer Ward (1968), August 1914 (1971), and The Gulag Archipelago 1918-1956 (1973). show more Solzhenitsyn was awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize in Literature "for the ethical force with which he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature".[ This book covers how Solzhenitsyn maximized the PR benefit for him while not going Stockholm to receive his award for fear that he would not be allowed to reenter. He was eventually “expatriated” suddenly from the Soviet Union to Frankfurt, West Germany and stripped of his Soviet citizenship.in 1974. That mysterious plane trip is the most dramatic part of the work here, but still he can’t help but showing off one-upping his minders, such as to peremptorily go to the restroom.

I was hoping to get more about life in the Soviet era and particularly the effects of the state police apparatus. This is covered mostly in their organized phone harassment, but I feel I had a better picture drawn for me in the novels [book:We the Living|668], Darkness at Noon, and even the fanciful 1984.
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Solzhenitsyn relates his round-by-round ten-year war to outwit Russia's rulers and their toadies and got his work published in his own country.
Il libro è l'autobiografia di un uomo che, solo e inerme in un regime di cui respinge l'ideologia, vuole vivere senza "menzogna". L'arco di tempo compreso nel libro va dl 1953 al 1974.

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360+ Works 44,663 Members
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was born on December 11, 1918 in Kislovodsk in the northern Caucusus Mountains. He received a degree in physics and math from Rostov University in 1941. He served in the Russian army during World War II but was arrested in 1945 for writing a letter criticizing Stalin. He spent the next decade in prisons and labor camps and, show more later, exile, before being allowed to return to central Russia, where he worked as a high school science teacher. His first novel, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, was published in 1962. In 1970, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. In 1974, he was arrested for treason and exiled following the publication of The Gulag Archipelago. He moved to Switzerland and later the U. S. where he continued to write fiction and history. When the Soviet Union collapsed, he returned to his homeland. His other works include The First Circle and The Cancer Ward. He died due to a heart ailment on August 3, 2008 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Adrian, Esa (Translator)
Geier, Swetlana (Translator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Oak and the Calf: Sketches of Literary Life in the Soviet Union
Original title
Бодался теленок с дубом
Original publication date
1975
Original language*
venäjä
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genre
Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
891.73Literature & rhetoricLiteratures of other languagesEast Indo-European and Celtic literaturesRussian and East Slavic languagesRussian fiction
LCC
PG3488 .O4 .Z49513Language and LiteratureSlavic languages and literatures. Baltic languages. Albanian languageSlavic. Baltic. AlbanianRussian literatureIndividual authors and works1961-2000

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ASINs
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