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Word: gulag (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...hard to determine. He was a Jew who prospered during the anti-Semitic Stalin years, while other notable Jewish writers were judicially murdered; he was a poet and novelist who won the Stalin Prize while his personal friends Osip Mandelstam and Isaac Babel were sent to the gulag. Clearly, Ehrenburg was no beacon of conscience...

Author: By Adam Kirsch, | Title: Stalin's Not-So-Willing Propagandist | 5/17/1996 | See Source »

...flush of optimism after the 1917 Revolution, artists like Vladimir Tatlin hoped that abstraction, if made of the common materials used by workers, could lift dialectical materialism to a new plane and so become the basis of a popular art. These dreams ended in indifference and, for some, the Gulag...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: GOLDEN OLDIES | 3/4/1996 | See Source »

...like Marxist-Leninism. But there is more. The party's official program looks back longingly to Yuri Andropov, a former kgb chief and Soviet party head from 1982 to 1984, crediting him somehow with establishing "freedom of speech and freedom of political associations." As for Stalin's purges and Gulag and the corruption of the Brezhnev era, they were "mistakes" to be avoided in the future, Zyuganov says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOW DARK A RED IS HE? | 1/8/1996 | See Source »

...know, Vanserg is located off Francis Avenue near the Divinity School. We'd like to give you a better idea of Vanserg's location, but directions to this remote building might take up an entire editorial. Just think of the building as Harvard's answer to a Siberian gulag and you'll be fine...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Ease the Move To Vanserg | 12/5/1995 | See Source »

...youth. In 1945, my physician father and I were taken by the Soviet NKVD (more recently the KGB) from our home in Budapest, Hungary, and, though innocent, accused of espionage. (After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the charges were dropped.) We were shipped to the labor camps (Gulag) of the dreaded Kolyma region of northeastern Siberia, where I spent eight years between life and death. At one point, I weighed 85 lbs., and only a miracle saved me from joining those wooden crosses. My father's body is buried there, and it is quite possible that one of those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Sep. 25, 1995 | 9/25/1995 | See Source »

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