The Gulag Archipelago Volume 1: An Experiment in Literary Investigation

Capa
Harper Collins, 7 de ago. de 2007 - 704 páginas

Volume 1 of the gripping epic masterpiece, Solzhenitsyn's chilling report of his arrest and interrogation, which exposed to the world the vast bureaucracy of secret police that haunted Soviet society

 

Conteúdo

The Law as a Child
299
The Law Becomes a Man
334
The Law Matures
371
The Supreme Measure
432
Tyurzak
456
Perpetual Motion
488
The Ships of the Archipelago
489
Translators Notes
616

First Cell First Love
179
That Spring
237
In the Engine Room
277

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Sobre o autor (2007)

After serving as a decorated captain in the Soviet Army during World War II, Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008) was sentenced to prison for eight years for criticizing Stalin and the Soviet government in private letters. Solzhenitsyn vaulted from unknown schoolteacher to internationally famous writer in 1962 with the publication of his novella One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1968. The writer's increasingly vocal opposition to the regime resulted in another arrest, a charge of treason, and expulsion from the USSR in 1974, the year The Gulag Archipelago, his epic history of the Soviet prison system, first appeared in the West. For eighteen years, he and his family lived in Vermont. In 1994 he returned to Russia. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn died at his home in Moscow in 2008.

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