Soviet Scientists Remember: Oral Histories Of The Cold War Generation

Soviet Scientists Remember: Oral Histories Of The Cold War Generation

Author
Maria A. Rogacheva
Publisher
Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield Publishing
Language
English
Edition
1st Edition
Year
2020
Page
203
ISBN
1498574343,9781498574341,1498574351,9781498574358
File Type
pdf
File Size
1.1 MiB

Review This book is a good contribution to the library of the research on the everyday life of different social groups in the USSR. Moreover, this book is a nice guide for scholars who study different Soviet social groups, elites, and scholarly life; it would make a useful companion for example to the various series of notes and books about sociologists of that time that have been published in Russia and abroad. More broadly, it will have appeal for everyone who is interested in the history of Soviet everyday life and Soviet science in particular. ― Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and SocietyTouching on issues ranging from housing and personal life to culture and politics, these interviews paint a rich picture of life and work of the inhabitants of Chernogolovka, a home town for a branch of the Academy of Science’s Institute of Chemical Physics and several other research institutes near Moscow, from its founding in 1956 to the post-Soviet times. This collection is a valuable source not only for the history of Soviet science and technology, but also for the study of Soviet citizens’ daily life. ― The Russian ReviewMaria A. Rogacheva’s Soviet Scientists Remember provides a glance behind the still-existing curtain of secrecy surrounding one closed Soviet city, Chernogolovka. In a series of oral interviews, Rogacheva shows the hopes, dreams, and disappointments in the everyday lives of postwar scientists, arguably the most inscrutable segment of Soviet society. -- Kate Brown, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInfluential, highly educated, and critically minded, Soviet scientists represented an elite cohort in the Soviet Union after World War II, yet their lived experiences under a system that exacted total loyalty remain woefully understudied. Drawing on oral history methodologies, Maria A. Rogacheva helps fill this gaping hole in the literature with this fine collection of illuminating personal narratives. These stories aid us in comprehending not only how big science functioned in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, but also how individuals’ personal encounters with Soviet power shaped their attitudes toward critical social, political, and economic issues. Wide-ranging, their views reflect the Soviet state’s capacity to empower—and to constrain. Soviet Scientists Remember: Oral Histories of the Cold War Generation is a must-read for anyone interested in the Soviet intelligentsia, science, and daily life under late socialism and afterward. -- Donald J. Raleigh, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillIn her series of detailed, in-depth interviews with scientists, Rogacheva puts together a rich picture of life and work in a highly classified research community during the late Soviet decades. Prompted by Rogacheva’s intelligent questions, eminent Soviet researchers reflect on what it meant to survive and remember World War II, to have family members arrested and killed, to live through Stalin’s death, to hear (about) Khrushchev’s Secret Speech, to read and discuss dissenting literature during the Brezhnev years, to breathe the air of Gorbachev’s reforms, to go on the street during the August 1991 coup, and to see a superpower collapse before your very own eyes. On many occasions in their lives, these people had to make momentous choices—whether to speak up or to keep silent, whether to leave or to stay in their country. The book thus offers no less than a collective oral history of the entire late Soviet epoch, remembered by some of its most sophisticated and eloquent eyewitnesses. Rogacheva deserves high praise for this achievement. -- Denis Kozlov, Dalhousie University Product Description Maria Rogacheva’s Soviet Scientists Remember gives voice to one of the most prominent and educated groups in the late USSR: scientists. Lifting the veil of secrecy that covered scientists during the Cold War, this book brings together six first-person accounts of residents of the formerly closed scientific town

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