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Word: stalinism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...writer. He read War and Peace in its entirety when he was only 10. But as a young man he couldn't get his work published, and he wound up studying mathematics in college. Then he was drafted into the Red Army in 1941. If it weren't for Stalin, his ambition might have gone unfulfilled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Remembering Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn | 8/4/2008 | See Source »

...hunting accident while his mother was pregnant. His mother was a typist. A zealous communist, Solzhenitsyn served with distinction in World War II, but in 1945, in the teeth of the Red Army's march on Berlin, he was arrested for a personal letter that contained passages critical of Stalin and sentenced to eight years in a labor camp. His life as a free man was over, but his life as a writer and a thinker had just begun...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Remembering Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn | 8/4/2008 | See Source »

...time, the Soviet government tolerated Solzhenitsyn. Khrushchev was eager to discredit Stalin and consolidate his own power, and Solzhenitsyn's work served his political aims. He became a global literary celebrity. But he quickly outlived his political usefulness, and his next two books, The First Circle and The Cancer Ward, had to be published abroad. In 1970 Solzhenitsyn won the Nobel prize for literature, but he wasn't permitted to leave the country to accept it. In 1973 he completed the first volume of The Gulag Archipelago, a thundering, encyclopedic indictment of the Soviet labor camp system and the government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Remembering Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn | 8/4/2008 | See Source »

...book it superficially resembles, but only superficially) CHILD 44 By Tom Rob Smith A serial killer is loose in 1953 Russia, but the state won't even admit that he exists How do you catch a killer in a world run by the biggest serial killer of them all--Stalin? Anything by Alan Furst, Martin Cruz Smith (who wrote Gorky Park) or John le Carré. Or Dostoyevsky

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Three First Novels that Just Might Last | 6/26/2008 | See Source »

...remnants of the event—like a sign with Stalin warning partygoers not to smoke lest they be sent to Siberia—were still scattered around the Co-op recently...

Author: By Lingbo Li, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Half-Century of Flouting the Mainstream at Dudley Co-op | 6/4/2008 | See Source »

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