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Ladataan... Conversations with Stalin (vuoden 1969 painos)Tekijä: Milovan Djilas (Tekijä)
TeostiedotConversations with Stalin (tekijä: Milovan Djilas (Author))
![]() All Things Russia (68) Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. I felt I didn't get as much out of this as I could have done given my ignorance of many of the events the author talks about. Many of the individuals involved were likewise unknown to me, and the few details he sketches of certain prominent characters (Beria, Molotov, etc) didn't really add much to what I already knew. Regarding the man himself, Djilas probably gives as accurate a representation as he can, but they are by nature only one man's experience of a complex and multifaceted personality, and therefore a bit one-dimensional. But this isn't a bio, so much as a study in disillusionment. Split into three largish chapters -- Raptures, Doubts and Disappointments -- the author charts his gradual realization that a system that he held to be the pinnacle of human achievement was in fact nothing of the sort. The turnaround isn't quite so dramatic as it could have been, partly due to Djilas's rather low-key style that never really convinces us of his emotional states at any particular time, and partly because he never hides the fact that he's writing the work from a position of condemnation. I'll probably come back to this at a later time, when I'm a bit more familiar with the events and context. I felt I didn't get as much out of this as I could have done given my ignorance of many of the events the author talks about. Many of the individuals involved were likewise unknown to me, and the few details he sketches of certain prominent characters (Beria, Molotov, etc) didn't really add much to what I already knew. Regarding the man himself, Djilas probably gives as accurate a representation as he can, but they are by nature only one man's experience of a complex and multifaceted personality, and therefore a bit one-dimensional. But this isn't a bio, so much as a study in disillusionment. Split into three largish chapters -- Raptures, Doubts and Disappointments -- the author charts his gradual realization that a system that he held to be the pinnacle of human achievement was in fact nothing of the sort. The turnaround isn't quite so dramatic as it could have been, partly due to Djilas's rather low-key style that never really convinces us of his emotional states at any particular time, and partly because he never hides the fact that he's writing the work from a position of condemnation. I'll probably come back to this at a later time, when I'm a bit more familiar with the events and context. A fascinating little book for anyone interested in the period - Djilas was Yugoslav deputy prime minister and visited Moscow during and after WW2 (prior to the split between Tito and Stalin), meeting Stalin on several occasions. The book describes Djilas' growing disillusionment with communism through those meetings, but for those who've read that type of story a hundred times, the portraits of Stalin and his inner circle are well worth picking this one up for. Unlike anything else I have read on the period. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
Distinctions
A memoir by the former vice president of Yugoslavia describing three visits to Moscow and his encounters there with Stalin. Index. Translated by Michael B. Petrovich. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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A survivor of the Partisan Movement in WWII, Djilas, a Montenegrin oved towards more democratic sociaism in his postwar career, and was jailed for a good part of it by the Communists under Tito. This book of essays contrasts forms of democratic socialism with the strict Communist system. A Good book for the inquiring social scientists. (