| Acknowledgments |
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ix | |
| Introduction |
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xi | |
| PART I MEMOIRS AND DIARIES PUBLISHED AT THE END OF THE SOVIET EPOCH: AN OVERVIEW |
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1 | |
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Publishers, Authors, Texts, Reader, Corpus |
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The Background: Memoir Writing and Historical Consciousness |
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9 | |
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Connecting the "I" and History |
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15 | |
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17 | |
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24 | |
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Moving in with a New Text |
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Joining the Ranks of Victims |
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Remembering Stalin: Tears |
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Two Memoirs and a Novel Tell the Same Story |
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Generalizations: Soviet Memoirs as a Communal Apartment |
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41 | |
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The Archive and the Apocalypse |
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The End of the Intelligentsia |
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Qualification: The "I" in Quotation Marks |
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49 | |
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Excursus: Readers Respond in LiveJournal |
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51 | |
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55 | |
| PART II TWO TEXTS: CLOSE READINGS |
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57 | |
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1. Lidiia Chukovskaia's Diary of Anna Akhmatova's Life: "Intimacy and Terror" |
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59 | |
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The Years of Terror: In "the Torture Chamber" |
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62 | |
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Family and Home: "The Cesspit of a Communal Apartment" |
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66 | |
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Overview of Circumstances |
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The Apartment in Poems and Dreams |
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"To Have Dinner at the Same Table as Her Husband's Wife" |
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Generalizations: The Soviet State, Domestic Space, and Intimacy |
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77 | |
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Poverty and Squalor: New Living Forms and New Insight |
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The Helplessness and the Power |
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"A New Epoch Began": After 1953 |
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Did They Understand What Was Going On? |
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Akhmatova's Things and Manuscripts |
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An Aside: Memoirs as Historical Evidence |
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Historical Continuity: The 1930's and the 1960's |
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"Same Time, Same Facts, Different Memories" |
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Concluding Vignette: "She'll Tell You What 1937 Was Like" |
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115 | |
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2. The Notebooks of the Peasant Evgeniia Kiseleva: "The War Separated Us Forever" |
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118 | |
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Notebook "The Story of My Life" |
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120 | |
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The Separation and the War |
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After the Second Marriage |
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134 | |
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Television and Apocalypsis |
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A Comment on Historical Continuity: The Past War and the Future War |
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Generalizations: The Soviet State in the Domestic Space |
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The End: "We Live Like Strangers" |
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How These Notebooks Reached the Reader: The Interpreters |
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150 | |
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Defining the Status of the Text: "Naive Writing" |
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The Competition between Publishers: "Legislators and Interpreters" |
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The Disappearance of the Author |
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"Person without Subjecthood" |
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159 | |
| PART III DREAMS OF TERROR: INTERPRETATIONS |
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161 | |
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Comments on Dreams as Stories and as Sources |
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161 | |
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Andrei Arzhilovsky: The Peasant Raped by Stalin |
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166 | |
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Nikolai Bukharin Dreams of Stalin: Abraham and Isaac |
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171 | |
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Writers' Dreams: Mikhail Prishvin |
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172 | |
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Writers' Dreams: Veniamin Kaverin |
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182 | |
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The Dreams of Anna Akhmatova |
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187 | |
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A Comment on Writers' and Peasants' Theories of Dreams |
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194 | |
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A Philosopher's Dreams: Yakov Druskin |
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197 | |
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203 | |
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205 | |
| CONCLUSION |
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| EPILOGUE |
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211 | |
| Appendix: Russian Texts |
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213 | |
| Notes |
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259 | |
| Index |
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279 | |