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Saturday, December 13, 2008 - 2:04 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 came not only the
chance of opening up a closed society but the hope of a kind of
scholarly glasnost -- opening up closed archives and bringing long-buried secrets into the light of day.
In 1992, Jonathan Brent, an editor at Yale
University Press, first flew to Moscow to investigate the possibility
of publishing documents from the vast collections of the defunct Soviet
state. http://louis1j1sheehan1esquire.wordpress.com
In "Inside the Stalin Archives," he gives us an account of his
experience over the years -- meeting with archive directors, ex-KGB
agents and aging politicians, rummaging through state labyrinths (the
Central Party Archive alone has 250 million documents), engaging
researchers and editors, and eventually viewing diaries, letters and
other treasures long hidden away from the world. http://louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
The result of Mr. Brent's efforts, so far, is the 20 volumes of
Yale's "Annals of Communism" series, many of which offer archival
documents alongside the commentary and analysis of scholars. In "The
Secret World of American Communism" (1995), for instance, Harvey Klehr,
John Earl Haynes and Fridrikh I. Firsov produce 92 documents showing
the extensive Soviet espionage apparatus in the U.S. in the 1930s and
1940s. Other books in the series present Lenin's unpublished writings,
trace the Soviet role in the Spanish Civil War and reproduce the KGB
file of Andrei Sakharov (1921-89), the physicist and dissident.
Unearthing such material wasn't easy. Mr. Brent recounts tense
negotiations over access, rights and payment in a dodgy ethical
atmosphere where protocol -- other than bribery -- was unknown. His
Russian counterparts repeatedly threaten to shred contracts on grounds
of mere personal displeasure. A KGB general, whose memoir Mr. Brent
considers publishing, intimidates him by referring to the birth of Mr.
Brent's daughter -- not public information. To investigate the origins
of Stalin's Great Terror, a Russian historian tells Mr. Brent that he
must venture deep into KGB archives. "Will we get to the bottom of the
KGB?" Mr. Brent asks. "Of course," replies the historian. "But the KGB
has many bottoms." http://louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
Inside the Stalin Archives
By Jonathan Brent
(Atlas & Co., 335 pages, $26)
Mr. Brent intersperses his archival quest with
reflections on modern Russia. His argument -- based on his frequent
visits and on his own scholarly expertise (he is the author of
"Stalin's Last Crime: The Doctors' Plot") -- is that the Soviet
mentality is reasserting itself aggressively in Russia today. He sees a
return not to the 1930s but to the 1970s: Scholars are bullied for
insufficient reverence toward the Red Army; documents, though made
public for a while, are reclassified into secrecy; rooms are
perfunctorily bugged. In short, Mr. Brent finds that the Soviet state
is not as defunct as he thought.
Certainly, in Mr. Brent's view, Russia feels the same:
drab, careworn, suffocating. He describes the unrelieved crumminess of
all Russian manufactures that are not weapons or space stations. Empty
restaurants run out of menus, their strange meats unpierceable by the
average fork. He attaches special meaning to the arrival of Russian
Vogue in 1998, a sign that high-end consumerism had arrived for the
lucky few. But one day he witnesses how Western markets mix with
Russian illiberalism: The patrons of a Stefano Ricci clothing store are
hustled out as men with submachine guns take up posts at the entrance.
A billionaire has come to shop, it turns out. Russia remains a country
of men, not laws. http://louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
Along with serving as an editor at Yale University Press, Mr. Brent
is professor of Russian literature at Bard College, and "Inside the
Stalin Archives" strives for a literary sheen. The glut of allusion
ranges from the merely learned ("another Gogolian canard") to the
downright professorial ("like the golden nail in the flea's shoe in the
story by Leskov"). Mr. Brent often uses the 10-ruble word when the
25-kopeck one will do. He doesn't take a Kleenex from his pocket but
must "extract" it. And why board a bus when you can be "drawn upward
into the interior"? One evening he is drawn upward into the interior of
the wrong bus, and after two agonized paragraphs of coping with the
calamity he confesses in extremis: "I was about to yield
entirely to the sensation of dissolving into invisibility, of being
swept into will-less and forgetful obscurity, when the bus turned onto
a gradual leftward route that in a moment would become recognizable as
Kutuzovsky Prospect!" I hate to think what happens when he loses his
wallet.
But perhaps a touch of existential despair may be excused when, for
locals, it is tradition itself. No country that staggers within a
century from Third Rome to Third International to Third World looks
confidently to its future. When Mr. Brent asks a woman what she thinks
about the years ahead, she answers: "I don't." So perilous seem the
alternatives -- enfeebling disorder here, Vladimir Putin's
proto-tyranny there -- that a Russian scholar offers Mr. Brent this
gloomy philosophy: The best thing that could happen to Russia right now
is nothing.
History was fiction during the Soviet era, and proud Russians still
resist embarrassing truths. Mr. Brent asks: "Could the legacy of Stalin
be on the verge of a rebirth?" The despot has millions of defenders in
Russia, no matter that in 1937 alone he had 353,074 Soviet citizens
shot after trials typically lasting less than 20 minutes. Russians
regularly rank Stalin as one of their great leaders because, Mr. Brent
notes, he represents in their minds the glorious patriotic power that
repulsed Hitler, brought half the world under its rule and gave a
battered people a measure of glory and order. http://louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com The antidote to
Stalin-worship, of course, is a broad dissemination of facts too long
concealed from the world -- the goal of Mr. Brent and his publishing
project.
But Mr. Brent never answers his question about Stalinism's rebirth.
He suggests only that Russia is "poised" in a "twilight" between
"authoritarianism and freedom." It goes too far to speak of Stalinist
revival, but one thing is certain: The question of Russia is really the
question of how authoritarian it will become. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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