Faculty Of Useless Knowledge
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Product details
- ISBN 9781846556982
- Weight: 562g
- Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 11 Feb 2013
- Publisher: Vintage Publishing
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
The Year of Terror, 1937. Zybin, an exiled intellectual and archaeologist in the far province of Alma-Ata, finds himself wrongly accused of a crime during the darkest days of Stalin's reign. Soon, he and his colleagues are caught up in an ambitious Cheka investigator's attempts to set up a show trial to rival those taking place in Moscow.
Vivid, courageous and defiant, The Faculty of Useless Knowledge is the crowning achievement by the author of The Keeper of Antiquities and The Dark Lady and draws heavily on autobiographical experience. First published in Russian in 1978, it is a masterpiece of anti-totalitarian literature, and stands alongside the works of Solzhenitsyn and Bulgakov in illuminating the chaos, absurdity and bureaucratic labyrinths of Soviet Russia.
Yury Dombrovsky (1909-1978) was born in Moscow, the son of a Jewish lawyer. He was arrested for the first time as a student in his second year of theatre studies in 1932 and exiled to Alma-Ata in Kazakhstan, where he published his first novel, Derzhavin. In 1937 he was arrested again and sent to a camp in northeast Siberia. Between 1943 and 1949 he lived in Alma-Ata teaching foreign literature; there he completed The Monkey Comes for His Skull, which he had begun in prison hospital, and wrote The Dark Lady. He was again arrested in 1949 in the campaign against "foreign influences and cosmopolitanism" and this time received a ten-year sentence to be served in Siberia. He was eventually released in 1955.
His novel The Keeper of Antiquities was published to acclaim in Novy Mir in 1964, at the end of Khrushchev's brief period of liberalization, but, like his other books, was not reprinted in Russia until the late 1980s. The Faculty of Useless Knowledge, his masterpiece, was written between 1964 and 1975, and first published in Russian in Paris just before he died; it only appeared in Russia in 1988.
It was widely believed that the KGB disapproved of his writing and Dombrovsky received numerous threats following publication; his arm was shattered by a steel pipe in the course of an assault on a bus, and he was finally attacked and severely beaten in the House of Literature. He died about a month and a half later, in May 1978.
