Posted by Ilya Somin:
Vasily Aksyonov, RIP:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1247011967


   Prominent Russian writer and political dissident Vasily Aksyonov
   has[1] passed away. Aksyonov was one of the leaders of the 1960s
   generation of Russian intellectuals who began to question the
   communist regime in various ways. His parents both spent time in
   Gulags during the Stalin era, and Aksyonov himself was shipped off to
   a government orphanage as the son of "enemies of the people" - an
   experience that probably influenced his later opposition to communism.
   Aksyonov wrote numerous well-known novels that criticized aspects of
   Soviet society. As he began to dissent from the party line more
   openly, his works were no longer published in the USSR and eventually
   he was expelled from the country in 1980. Aksyonov then lived in the
   US for over twenty years, teaching Russian literature at George Mason
   University (unfortunately, he left soon after I arrived, so I wasn't
   able to meet him).

   Unlike such Russian nationalist dissidents as[2] Alexander
   Solzhenitsyn, Aksyonov advocated liberal democracy, opposed
   anti-Semitism, and deplored the recent revival of authoritarian
   Russian nationalism under Vladimir Putin.

   English translations of many of his novels are available, including
   the epic Generations of Winter, which tells the story of a Russian
   family in the brutal Stalin era. [3]In Search of a Melancholy Baby
   (the title is awkwardly translated and really should be something like
   "In Search of a Sad Bady"), is a fascinating account of Aksyonov's
   impressions of life in the United States. An interesting lesser-known
   work is his 1980 alternate history novel,[4] Island of Crimea, which
   imagines what might have happened if the Crimean peninsula had been an
   island, allowing the "White" losers of the Russian Civil War to set up
   a noncommunist state there in 1920 - a kind of Russian counterpart to
   Taiwan (White forces did in fact hold out in Crimea for many months
   after being driven out of the mainland, but communist troops
   eventually penetrated the peninsula, forcing the White leaders to flee
   to the West).

   Aksyonov will be remembered for his literary achievements and also for
   helping to inspire an entire generation of dissident intellectuals.
   Russia certainly could use more people like him today.

References

   1. 
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iQlidzFfWLprRjMEMkO0ksOil68gD99960482
   2. 
http://www.volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_08_03-2008_08_09.shtml#1217811395
   3. 
http://www.amazon.com/Search-Melancholy-Baby-Vassily-Aksyonov/dp/0394759923/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247010009&sr=1-7
   4. 
http://www.amazon.com/ISLAND-CRIMEA-Translated-Michael-Henry/dp/B000MZ6HP0/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247010009&sr=1-6

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