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Proud to Suffer subscriber-only content

G.S. Smith

  • The Philosophy Steamer: Lenin and the Exile of the Intelligentsia by Lesley Chamberlain

‘What is to be done in a country whose genius has gone?’ Lev Loseff asks in his poem ‘June 1972’; Loseff’s close friend Joseph Brodsky had left Leningrad that month. The question brings to mind the title of Chernyshevsky’s 1863 novel, which soon came to codify a central preoccupation of the Russian intelligentsia. But in this instance it also raises the notion that the poet’s departure symbolised a graver loss, to do with the country’s identity.

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G.S. Smith is a former professor of Russian at Oxford and an emeritus fellow of New College. D.S.Mirsky: A Russian-English Life, 1890-1939 came out in 2000.

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