Предметом этих воспоминаний стал поиск ответа на вопрос о том, как и почему история и коммунизм, объединившись, сформировали и вдохновили жизнь рожденного в Нью-Йорке американского еврея, отец которого вступил в коммунистическую партию США в 1939 году. Мемуары охватывают почти полувековой промежуток периода господства идеологии холодной войны и три континента. Они воссоздают путь открытий и самопознания в годы студенчества в Колумбийском университете, аспирантуры в Оксфорде, поисков в советских архивах, на угольных месторождениях Восточной Украины и в новом независимом Узбекистане.
I really enjoyed this autobiography. Lewis Siegelbaum is a Russian historian and a boomer. His experience as a college student during the Vietnam Era was very similar to my own. He was a couple of years ahead of me, which made a great difference in so far as his academic career is concerned. He had a very different background to mine. His family emigrated to this country decades after mine. His older relatives spoke Yiddish and his father had been a victim of the McCarthy era. He went to public schools on Long Island and did very well, going to Columbia during the SDS occupation there. At some point, he decided to concentrate on an academic career. He made contacts at Columbia that enabled him to get in to Oxford, where he was able to earn a doctorate in Russian History. He was able to get funding for his research from IREX, and then was able to get a teaching job in Australia. He was there for the Reagan era, and was able to get a tenure track position at Michigan State. Most of the book is a rendition of his career in the shifting currents of academic fashion. He began as a Social historian of the Russian Industrial class during WWI but became caught up in the revisionist movement to overthrow the ColdWar Totalitarian theory of Russian History. He began to study the Russian working class during the Soviet period. He and his cohort began to incorporate other European methods at looking at class. They studied cultural history to incorporate new elements for a better understanding of the society. I feel some sense of loss, not having the experience that I may have had. But his commitment to social change seems to have had different outcome for him. His re-evaluation of the Soviet experience is interesting. The story concludes with his readjustment to retirement and watching Jeopardy. So we ended up in pretty much the same place. Too bad he did not know about the Russian invasion of the Ukraine. It is now politically incorrect to like anything Russian. But he does and I do. Russian History for me never became a job, it has always been my passion.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is an excellent memoir of a senior scholar in the field of Soviet history. It covers his early life and career as he lived through formative years in the US, Western Europe, and Eastern Europe since the 1950s. Dr. Siegelbaum’s experiences are a treasure to read as a graduate student going through his own period of researching and writing. These memoirs show that it is important to be self reflexive about ones position in live and growth and development from internal and external factors.
Милые профессиональные (т.е. со сносками) воспоминания, в основном о поле социальной истории труда, но с заездами и по соседству - соответственно исследовательским интересами автора. Много полезного о том, как была устроена профессия.