The intelligentsia is dead, long live the intelligentsia! : Alexander Solzhenitsyn on soviet dissidence and a new spiritual elite
Abstract
This article explores the peculiar intermeshing of continuity and discontinuity in Russian culture through the prism of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s essay, 'Obrazovanshchina' ('The Smatterers'). Written in 1974 for the collective volume Iz-pod glyb (From Under the Rubble), Solzhenitsyn drew on arguments advanced by contributors to the famous pre-revolutionary work, Vekhi (Landmarks, 1909), both as a polemical tool to distance himself from his immediate contemporary rivals and as a template in his bid to establish a new spiritual elite in Brezhnev’s Soviet Russia. This article suggests that if one intention of Solzhenitsyn’s essay was to declare an irrevocable break with the culture of the pre-revolutionary intelligentsia tradition, the discursive tools he used to do this (intertextual devices, ad hominem polemics, selective historical and ideological narratives) remained firmly anchored within that tradition.
Citation
Nethercott , F 2022 , ' The intelligentsia is dead, long live the intelligentsia! Alexander Solzhenitsyn on soviet dissidence and a new spiritual elite ' , Russian Literature , vol. 130 , pp. 29-50 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ruslit.2022.03.002
Publication
Russian Literature
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0304-3479Type
Journal article
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