Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets by Svetlana Alexievich translated by By Bela Shayevich

If you would like to try and understand the Soviet and post-Soviet psyche, these first-hand, verbatim interviews from 1991-2012, by Svetlana Alexievich, the Belarusian Nobel Laureate, question and discuss what it means and meant to be a Soviet. With a wide selection of individual testimonies from different backgrounds of the Soviet Union, from ordinary folk to officials, prisoners, relatives of those who were murdered, the executioners, the book also investigates how they coped when the Soviet Union broke down. Written from transcribed, spoken recordings, these documentary / reportage texts get to the heart of the matter—often that there is a gaping vacancy in the place of what one had previously believed in, from one's earliest of days, even before becoming a red-scarfed Pioneer. When one's whole philosophical fabric has been torn down, how do you exist? How do you cope and make sense of the world? What really is so special about this book is that it is candid, first hand, from voices, deep within the system, away from the regular propaganda streams.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 16, 2022 07:39
No comments have been added yet.


Exhibition

Henry Virgin
Please visit my exhibition in the metaverse

https://www.spatial.io/s/hjevs-galler...

Featuring AI Text-Generated Portraits, NFTs, animations, poems, book trailers, and graphic works by Henry Virgin, the
...more
Follow Henry Virgin's blog with rss.