Between Stalin's death in 1953 and 1960, the government of the Soviet Union released hundreds of thousands of prisoners from the Gulag as part of a wide-ranging effort to reverse the worst excesses and abuses of the previous two decades and revive the spirit of the revolution. This exodus included not only victims of past purges but also those sentenced for criminal offenses.
In Khrushchev's Cold Summer, Miriam Dobson explores the impact of these returnees on communities and, more broadly, Soviet attempts to come to terms with the traumatic legacies of Stalin's terror. Confusion and disorientation undermined the regime's efforts at recovery. In the wake of Stalin's death, ordinary citizens and political leaders alike struggled to make sense of the country's recent bloody past and to cope with the complex social dynamics caused by attempts to reintegrate the large influx of returning prisoners, a number of whom were hardened criminals alienated and embittered by their experiences within the brutal camp system.
Drawing on private letters as well as official reports on the party and popular mood, Dobson probes social attitudes toward the changes occurring in the first post-Stalin decade. Throughout, she features personal stories as articulated in the words of ordinary citizens, prisoners, and former prisoners. At the same time, she explores Soviet society's contradictory responses to the returnees and shows that for many the immediate post-Stalin years were anything but a breath of spring air after the long Stalinist winter.
Editorial Reviews
Review
"This outstanding book examines the return of prisoners from the Gulag in the Soviet Union during the first decade after the death of Stalin. . . . Dobson considers the experiences not only of the minority of political prisoners from the Gulag, but also the majority who had been convicted of other crimes, including many prisoners who were hardened criminals. The prisoners' release set off a wave of anxiety in the country as some of the returnees committed crimes as they returned from their remote places of imprisonment and exile. The author examines the actions of the political leadership and how Khrushchev and other leaders were forced to deal with the unexpected consequences of their decisions. The impact of the prisoners' return on their families and others in their communities is also analyzed. Highly recommended."-Choice, September 2009
"Based on myriad personal stories, Khrushchev's Cold Summer is an original and important book that never loses sight of the big picture. Effectively using the medium of letter writing to the authorities, Miriam Dobson tells a human and often moving story of revived and crushed hopes, compassion and cruel indifference, zeal and apathy, ideological concerns, and petty calculations that formed Soviet life."-Amir Weiner, Stanford University
"In this remarkable book, Miriam Dobson offers a strikingly original and fascinating perspective on the de-Stalinization process. At the center of her captivating narrative is the dismantling of the Gulag and the impact-social, cultural, psychological-of former prisoners on Soviet society during the Khrushchev years. Her keen analysis provokes us to think anew about Khrushchev's leadership, the discourses of exclusion and inclusion in the USSR, and everyday life after Stalin."-Golfo Alexopoulos, University of South Florida, author of Stalin's Outcasts: Aliens, Citizens, and the Soviet State
"A truly panoptic study of Khrushchev's USSR, Miriam Dobson's book offers a perceptive analysis of de-Stalinization, especially the social and moral upheavals following the mass return of 'Stalin's outcasts' from the Gulag. Based on new archival sources and covering issues as diverse as party politics, youth culture, and prisoners' tattoos, it shows a society in the process of re-inventing itself, defining new values and articulating new meanings for justice, honor, and respectability. Among the relatively few books on Soviet society during the Khrushchev period, this is without doubt one of the most authoritative and readable ones."-Hubertus F. Jahn, University of Cambridge
"In this major revisionist study, Miriam Dobson details one of the most important chapters in the history of Khrushchev's reforms. The release of hundreds of thousands of prisoners from the Gulag, before and after Khrushchev's secret speech, symbolized and reflected the regime's efforts at de-Stalinization. At the same time, the release of these prisoners, only a minority of whom were political prisoners, led to a wave of crime and social anxiety across the Soviet Union, resulting in the paradox of this reform ultimately leading the regime back to illegality in the interests of law and order. Based on a wide variety of declassified archival sources, Khrushchev's Cold Summer shows both the extent to which Stalinism endured in Soviet society and the multiple obstacles to change. The result is a fascinating tale of society's response to Khrushchev's reforms based on an astute analysis and sympathetic reading of hundreds of unpublished letters to leaders, journals, and newspapers."-Lynne Viola, University of Toronto, author of The Unknown Gulag: The Lost World of Stalin's Special Settlements
"In an original and provocative book, Dobson examines two of the most important developments of the Khrushchev years-the emptying of the Gulag and the widespread, popular apprehension about the wave of criminality that swept across the Soviet Union during the 1950s and 1960s."-Slavic Review
"While Dobson's argument is refreshingly new, her deft and insightful handling of sources is the real strength of this book. Khrushchev's Cold Summer is a gem of historical scholarship."-American Historical Review
"Dobson's book is a fascinating study of the scope and limits of criminal justice policy liberalization in an authoritarian regime. On the one hand, as noted above, Khrushchev's reforms were limited from the outset by his unwillingness to countenance measures that could undermine the Communist Party's rule, as well as his increasing disappointment with (as he saw it) the unwillingness of the ex-convicts to conform to the norms of Soviet society. Indeed, one of Dobson's more interesting findings is that criminal justice reforms were also blocked in part by popular opposition. As she argues, Khrushchev and his government had to deal with-and ultimately accommodate-the highly punitive views of many Soviet citizens and low-level officials, which of course had been encouraged (not to say required) during Stalin's more than two decades in absolute power. On the other hand, the fact remains that Khrushchev managed to engineer the release of some 4 million prisoners from the Gulag over a barely five-year period, which must surely make the amnesties of the early 1950s one of the largest releases of prisoners in contemporary world history."-Law and Politics Book Review
"Khrushchev's Cold Summer mines recently opened archives, evoking the texture of returnees' lives from documentation of their interactions with the state-their petitions to Soviet authorities, and their investigation by police and persecutors when some again fell foul of the law."-TLS
"A fascinating journey into the first decade after Stalin's death and the transition from political terror to what later became known as 'the Thaw.' Khrushchev's Cold Summer is not simply an excellent piece of scholarship. It is a very important contribution to understanding the aftermath of the Gulag and the encounter of the returnees with the rest of society-including those who had imprisoned them as well as those who stood by silently-as a multi-faceted social process, a lot more complex and messy than was envisioned by the artistic intelligentsia. . . . Dobson maps this complexity beautifully, without diminishing the role of the intelligentsia's cultural production-films, literature, etc.-in shaping our perceptions of political terror, de-Stalinization and the aftermath of the camps."-Adi Kuntsman, H-Soz-u-Kult (July 2011)
From the Back Cover
"Based on myriad personal stories, Khrushchev's Cold Summer is an original and important book that never loses sight of the big picture. Effectively using the medium of letter writing to the authorities, Miriam Dobson tells a human and often moving story of revived and crushed hopes, compassion and cruel indifference, zeal and apathy, ideological concerns, and petty calculations that formed Soviet life."-Amir Weiner, Stanford University
"In this remarkable book, Miriam Dobson offers a strikingly original and fascinating perspective on the de-Stalinization process. At the center of her captivating narrative is the dismantling of the Gulag and the impact -- social, cultural, psychological-- of former prisoners on Soviet society during the Khrushchev years. Her keen analysis provokes us to think anew about Khrushchev's leadership, the discourses of exclusion and inclusion in the USSR, and everyday life after Stalin."--Golfo Alexopoulos, University of South Florida, author of Stalin's Outcasts: Aliens, Citizens, and the Soviet State
Miriam Dobson is Lecturer in Modern History at the University of Sheffield. She is the coeditor of Reading Primary Sources: The Interpretation of Texts from Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century History.
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《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名,本身就带有某种历史的厚重感和对时代变迁的深刻洞察。我好奇作者是如何在“寒冬”这个词语中,去描绘赫鲁晓夫执政时期的苏联。我期待书中能够深入挖掘赫鲁晓夫上台后,苏联所面临的国内外的挑战,以及他所推行的各项改革,例如,对斯大林时期体制的批判和调整,以及在国际舞台上,苏联与西方世界,特别是美国之间复杂而又微妙的关系。我希望能在这本书中,看到那些关于权力运作的细节,关于意识形态的较量,以及在这些宏大事件的背后,普通人是如何经历着属于他们的“寒冬”,又是如何在其中寻找希望和方向。
评分《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名,让我对接下来的阅读充满了期待,同时也引发了我对那个特定历史时期的诸多思考。我尤其想知道,作者是如何界定和描绘这个“寒冬”的,它是否仅仅是气候上的表现,还是更深层次的政治、经济或社会语境的体现?我期待书中能够深入剖析赫鲁晓夫上台后,苏联所面临的内外挑战,以及他为了应对这些挑战所采取的一系列改革措施。例如,他对斯大林个人崇拜的批判,以及在冷战背景下,苏联与其他国家,特别是美国之间的复杂关系。我设想,这本书或许会揭示出那些隐藏在官方叙事之下的真实历史,那些普通人的经历和情感,以及在那个充满不确定性的年代里,他们是如何努力寻找自己的位置。
评分初翻开《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》,我脑海中浮现的是一个黑白分明的世界,或许是冷战时期的某种具象化,空气中弥漫着紧张与期待,仿佛历史的洪流即将拍打在岸边。书的封面设计,一种沉静而又暗藏汹涌的视觉冲击,让人不禁想要一探究竟。我尤其好奇的是,作者是如何在“寒冬”这个词语中,捕捉到那个时代特有的那种,既有冻结的僵持,又暗藏着内在变革的复杂情感。我想象着,这不仅仅是一部关于政治事件的梳理,更可能是一次深入人心的情感探索,关于在巨大的时代洪流中,个体所经历的挣扎、选择以及最终的命运。作者是否能够将那些抽象的宏大叙事,转化为可感可触的人物故事?我期待着,能够在字里行间看到那些鲜活的面孔,听到他们内心的声音,理解他们在那个特定时空背景下的困惑与坚持。这本书,或许能为我打开一扇新的窗户,让我得以窥见那个并不遥远,却又充满着神秘色彩的过去。我迫不及待地想沉浸其中,体验那些曾经的激情与失落,感受那个时代的呼吸。
评分在我看来,《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》绝非仅仅是一部历史记录,它更像是一面精心打磨的镜子,映照出那个时代错综复杂的社会肌理和人心变幻。我很好奇作者如何处理那些敏感而又关键的转折点,例如,赫鲁晓夫上台后的种种改革,其背后蕴含着怎样的权力博弈和意识形态的较量?我设想,书中必然会深入到苏联内部的派系斗争,以及这些斗争如何一步步影响着对外政策的走向。同时,我也期待着作者能够描绘出普通民众在这一系列变革中的生活状态,他们的希望、恐惧,以及他们如何在时代的浪潮中努力生存。冷战的阴影笼罩着全球,那么这本书是否也触及了这场巨大博弈中,那些鲜为人知的细节?比如,情报机构的运作,秘密的外交谈判,以及那些常常被历史忽略的民间交流。我对书中对“寒冬”的隐喻尤其感兴趣,它可能象征着某种停滞,但也可能是一种孕育,是新的开始在冰封之下悄然滋生地。
评分我之所以被《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名所吸引,是因为它似乎在暗示着一种既有冰封的沉寂,又孕育着某种内在的涌动。我好奇作者将如何运用“寒冬”这个意象,来串联起赫鲁晓夫执政时期的主要事件和核心主题。我期待书中能够深入探讨赫鲁晓夫上台后,苏联所经历的政治、经济和意识形态上的变革,以及这些变革对当时世界格局所产生的影响。比如,他如何处理与西方国家的关系,特别是在古巴导弹危机等关键时刻,他所扮演的角色和做出的决策。同时,我也希望这本书能够不仅仅关注宏大的政治叙事,更能深入到社会层面,描绘出那个时代普通人的生活状态,他们的情感变化,以及他们在历史浪潮中的挣扎与选择。
评分初见《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名,我便对书中可能蕴含的丰富内容充满了好奇。我尤其想了解,作者是如何将“寒冬”这个概念,与赫鲁晓夫的政治生涯和苏联在那个时期的发展紧密联系起来。我期待书中能够深入探讨赫鲁晓夫上台后,苏联在政治、经济、文化等各个领域所推行的改革,以及这些改革的背景、过程和最终的结果。例如,他如何处理与美国的关系,如何在冷战的阴影下寻求缓和,或者在某些时刻又表现出强硬的态度。我希望作者能够以一种客观而又引人入胜的方式,展现出那个时代独特的时代精神,以及在时代变迁中,普通人所经历的喜怒哀乐。
评分读完《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》的篇章介绍,我脑海中立即浮现出那个时代的具体画面。我很好奇,作者是如何细致地描绘赫鲁晓夫的个人形象,他是一个怎样的人?是那个著名的“脱斯大林化”的改革者,还是那个在古巴导弹危机中展现出强硬一面的人物?我期待书中能够深入剖析他的性格特点、执政理念,以及这些因素如何共同塑造了苏联在那个时期的内外政策。同时,我也想了解,赫鲁晓夫的“寒冬”究竟指的是什么?是政治上的僵局,是经济上的困境,还是某种文化上的压抑?我希望作者能够通过具体的史实和生动的故事,来阐释这个核心概念。这本书,对我而言,更像是一次穿越时空的对话,我想听听赫鲁晓夫本人,以及他同时代的人们,是如何看待那个充满挑战和机遇的年代。
评分《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名本身就充满了诗意和力量,它让我对书中可能包含的内容产生了无限的遐想。我好奇作者是如何将“寒冬”这个意象贯穿于整本书的叙事之中,它是否不仅仅指代某个特定的时期,而是象征着一种更深层次的社会或政治氛围? 我期待书中能够探讨赫鲁晓夫执政期间,苏联在意识形态、经济结构以及社会文化等多个层面上所经历的深刻变革。他上台后所推行的去斯大林化政策,无疑是那个时代最重要的事件之一,我希望书中能够深入分析这一政策的背景、过程及其长远影响,同时,我也对书中可能涉及到的国际关系,特别是美苏之间的对峙与互动,充满了期待。作者是否能够挖掘出那些被历史尘封的细节,展现那个时期独特的地缘政治格局和复杂的权力博弈?
评分当我看到《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个书名时,脑海里立刻勾勒出一幅关于那个时代复杂而又深刻的图景。我特别想了解,作者是如何在“寒冬”这个关键词下,去解读赫鲁晓夫在苏联历史上的定位和他所带来的影响。我期待书中不仅仅是政治事件的陈述,更能深入探讨他执政时期所推行的各项政策,例如,对农业的改革,对文化艺术的松动,以及他与西方世界的几次关键性接触。这些政策的背后,无疑牵扯着复杂的权力斗争、思想解放的尝试以及国际格局的重塑。我非常好奇,作者是如何在宏大的历史叙事中,捕捉到那些触及人心的细节,去描绘出那个时代普通人的生活状态,他们的希望、迷茫以及他们在时代的洪流中所做的选择。
评分《赫鲁晓夫的寒冬》这个名字,让我对这本书产生了浓厚的兴趣,它预示着一段关于深刻变革和复杂时期的叙述。我好奇作者是如何把握赫鲁晓夫在苏联历史上的独特地位,以及他所推行的政策是如何塑造了那个时代的。我期待书中能够深入解析赫鲁晓夫上台后,苏联所经历的去斯大林化运动,这项运动的意义、影响以及它所带来的社会震荡。同时,我也对书中关于冷战时期国际关系的描写充满期待,特别是美苏之间的权力博弈和意识形态对抗,以及在这些宏大叙事之下,普通人的生活是如何被影响和改变的。我希望作者能够通过生动的笔触,展现出那个时代特有的氛围,以及在“寒冬”之下,人们所经历的种种情感和思考。
评分题目有点欺骗性,结果只是写了古拉格释放者的经历。
评分题目有点欺骗性,结果只是写了古拉格释放者的经历。
评分题目有点欺骗性,结果只是写了古拉格释放者的经历。
评分题目有点欺骗性,结果只是写了古拉格释放者的经历。
评分题目有点欺骗性,结果只是写了古拉格释放者的经历。
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