Khrushchev's Cold Summer : Gulag Returnees, Crime, and the Fate of Reform after Stalin
Khrushchev's Cold Summer : Gulag Returnees, Crime, and the Fate of Reform after Stalin
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Author(s): Dobson, M
Dobson, Miriam
ISBN No.: 9780801458514
Pages: 280
Year: 201101
Format: E-Book
Price: $ 179.40
Status: Out Of Print

Lynne Viola, University of Toronto, author of The Unknown Gulag: The Lost World of Stalin''s Special Settlements : "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tale of society''s response to Khrushchev''s reforms based on an astute analysis and sympathetic reading of hundreds of unpublished letters to leaders, journals, and newspapers." Adi Kuntsman: "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." "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.


" " 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." "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." "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.


" Golfo Alexopoulos, University of South Florida, author of Stalin''s Outcasts: Aliens, Citizens, and the Soviet State : "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." "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." Hubertus F. Jahn, University of Cambridge: "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.


" Amir Weiner, Stanford University: "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.".


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