Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Russian author of "The Gulag Archipelago," dies at 89

Monday, August 04, 2008

Guest: Archie Barron, producer and director of the documentary "The Solzhenitsyns Take a Long Way Home"

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn timeline:

Birth
1918, December 11
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn is born in Kislovodsk, Russia on December 11, 1918, as World War I was ending. His father dies six months before his birth.

A student of mathematics
1937
Now an unpublished and frustrated young author, Solzhenitsyn reluctantly studies Mathematics at Rostov University in Russia.

Natalia Reshetovskaia
1940
In 1940, Solzhenitsyn marries Natalia Reshetovskaia. She would divorce him in 1950, they would marry again in 1957, and then the two would divorce finally in 1972.

Captain Solzhenitsyn
1942
For some 2 1/2 years, during World War II, Solzhenitsyn serves as an artillery captain.

Imprisonment
1945, February
Solzhenitsyn is arrested in February 1945, for "disrespectful remarks" written about Stalin in correspondences with a friend. He is soon taken to a labor camp to carry out an eight-year sentence.

Writing
1947
Solzhenitsyn begins using a post as a school teacher of physics and math inside the scientific labor camps as a cover to write. His writings — poems, mostly — would survive his prison tenure, but he also commits reams of prose to memory. "The First Circle" would later chronicle this time period.

Political prison camp
1950
Solzhenitsyn is transferred to a labor camp for political prisoners in 1950, where he contracts stomach cancer. It clears in 1954 after treatment. The ordeal is later published as "The Cancer Ward" and "The Right Hand."

Perpetual exile
1953
After serving his eight-year prison term, Solzhenitsyn receives a new sentence: imprisonment for life.

Khrushchev
1953, September 7
Nikita Khrushchev takes power in the Soviet Union after Joseph Stalin's death earlier in the year.

Reprieve
1956
Khrushchev leads reforms and Solzhenitsyn is granted a reprieve from incarceration. He becomes a science teacher.

"Ivan Denisovich"
1961
After keeping his writing secret from most of his closest friends, the 43-year-old Solzhenitsyn's manuscript for "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" reaches "Novy Mir" editor Aleksandr Tvardovsky. Tvardovsky becomes its champion, publishing the polemical novel about a labor camp inmate in 1962, with the consent of Khrushchev in a brief period of de-Stalinization. Decades would pass before the Soviet Union publishes a second Solzhenitsyn novel (in 1989).

Writings seized
1964-1965
Solzhenitsyn comes to regret the publication of his first novel when, as Khrushchev is ousted, his plays are halted and his unpublished novel "The First Circle" is seized.

"The Gulag Archipelago"
1968
Solzhenitsyn completes his masterwork, "The Gulag Archipelago," a history of the labor camps in which he served. The book would become a scathing indictment of Russian dictator Joseph Stalin's government and it would popularize the term "gulag" for the camps where Stalin held political prisoners in an attempt to stymie opposition to the Soviet state.

Nobel Prize
1970
Solzhenitsyn wins the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970 (before the publication of "Gulag"), but the Soviet state protests, preventing him from receiving the prize for years. His unpublished manuscripts begin leaking to the West and Solzhenitsyn's literary fame grows.

"Gulag" published
1973
The first of the three volumes of "The Gulag Archipelago" is published. Aleksei Kosygin's Soviet government does not take immediate action.

Natalia Svetlova
1973
Solzhenitsyn marries his second wife, Natalia Svetlova. They have three sons: Yermolai, Stepan and Ignat.

Deportation
1974
The state-run newspaper "Pravda" labels Solzhenitsyn a traitor. He is stripped of his citizenship and deported to West Germany. Solzhenitsyn lives in Switzerland, then continues his exile in Cavendish, Vermont, where he completes "The Red Wheel," a series of novels about the formation of the modern Soviet Union. His later books receive little attention in the West and, in his last years, Solzhenitsyn earns renown as an irascible crank.

Return home
1994
Following the reinstatement of his citizenship in 1990 and the collapse of the U.S.S.R., Solzhenitsyn returns home, settling near Moscow, where he would live the rest of his life.

A "dominant writer"
2001
New Yorker editor David Remnick writes that Solzhenitzyn is "the dominant writer of the 20th century."

Death
2008, August 3
Son Stepan informs the media that his father has died at age 89.

Sources: The Nobel Foundation, The New York Times

Contributors:

Adnaan Wasey

Comments [2]

Katie

[COMMENT REMOVED. SEE GUIDELINES: NO PERSONAL ATTACKS ALLOWED. PLEASE BE CIVIL.]

Oct. 03 2009 08:57 PM
Dan

Adaora, You are a professional reporter... act like one. If you can't pronounce the name of a man who has been in the news for the last 20 years, you should think about another line of work. Your errors are not funny or cute and Hockenberry's covering for your errors diminishes your and his effectivenes on the air. Your constant mistakes are an embarassment to NPR... think about a coach... and maybe, actually practice names before you get on the air.

Aug. 04 2008 09:05 AM

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