By Boris Pasternak, Isaac Babel, Alexander Grin, Mikhail Zoshchenko, Boris Pilnyak, Sergei Esenin, Ilya Ehrenburg, Ivan Kharabarov, Max Hayward, Patricia Blake, Evgeni Zamyatin, Vladimir Polyakov, Lev Kassil, Julia Neiman, Nikolai Chukovsky, Yuri Kazakov, Vl

That's right.

Contents
Introduction by means of Max Hayward, vii
BORIS PASTERNAK
Without Love, 3
EVGENI ZAMYATIN
On Literature, Revolution, and Entropy,
VICTOR SHKLOVSKY
Form and fabric in artwork, 20
SERGEI ESENIN
Soviet Russia, 29
KONSTANTIN PAUSTOVSKY
Reminiscences of Babel, 33
ISAAC BABEL
The trip, 52
ALEXANDER GRIN
The Making of Asper, 62
BORIS PASTERNAK
M.Ts., 71
BORIS PILNYAK
Mahogany, 74
MIKHAIL ZOSHCHENKO
Before dawn, 108
VLADIMIR POLYAKOV
Fireman ProMiorchuk or the tale of a narrative, 132
LEV KASSIL
The story of the 3 grasp Craftsmen, 137
JULIA NEIMAN
1941, 156
NIKOLAI CHUKOVSKY
The Tramp, 158
IVAN KHARABAROV
Untrodden course, 185
YURI KAZAKOV
The Outsider, 188
VLADIMIR TENDRYAKOV
Three, Seven, Ace, 205
ILYA EHRENBURG
People, Years, and lifestyles, 236
EVGENI EVTUSHENKO
Babi-Yar, 260
NIKOLAI ARZAK
This Is Moscow talking, 262

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Additional resources for Dissonant Voices in Soviet Literature

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In the last eight years, though sudden advances have often been succeeded by alarming setbacks, there has been a constant and cumulative improvement in nearly all spheres. Though ultimate Party control of literature and the arts has never been abandoned (and could of course at any moment be restored in all its vigor) it has nevertheless been exercised, on the whole, with restraint and intelligence and has even, for brief periods, been relaxed to a degree which would have been quite inconceivable in Stalin’s day.

Translation by Walter N. Vickery. E V G E N I ZAMYATIN On Literature, Revolution, and Entropy Tell me what is the final integer, the one at the very top, the biggest of all. But that’s ridiculous! Since the number of integers is in­ finite, how can you have a final integer? LITERATURE, REVOLUTION, AND ENTROPY [13 Well then how can you have a final revolution? There is no final revolution. Revolutions are infinite. —Evgeni Zamyatin, We Ask the question point-blank: What is revolution? You get a variety of replies.

In his novel Kochetov made the ominous point that there could indeed have been a “Hungarian” crisis in Russia itself and that the Soviet intellectuals—he sometimes puts the word in a pejorative diminutive form: intelligentiki —of the type of Ehrenburg (who though not mentioned by name is clearly alluded to) would have been morally responsible for it. e. the Party leadership. For several months after Hungary there was a violent campaign against “revisionism”; for a short time in 1957 Kochetov was editor of the strategic and hitherto on the whole “liberal” Literary Gazette and there was scarcely any interesting new literature.

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