Stalingrad Lives

Regular price €72.99
A01=Ian Garner
accounts
Adolph Hitler
Aleksandr Shcherbakov
Alexander
Author_Ian Garner
Battle
belief
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Category=DS
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Civilians
Correspondents
David Ortenberg
Eastern Front
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Fiction
frontline
Hermann Goring
Josef
Joseph Stalin
Konstantin Simonov
Krasnaya Zvezda
memoirs
memory
military history
myth
Newspapers
Operation Blue
Papers
Pravda
Propaganda
realist
Red Star
resurrection
Russian Literature
Second World War
Socialist Realism
Soviet Union
Sovinformbyuro
Stalingrad
Stories
Street Fighting
Subjectivity
Tales
Translation
Trauma
USSR
Vasilii
Vasily Grossman
Viktor Nekrasov
Volgograd
Warfare
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228014188
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the fall of 1942, only the city of Stalingrad stood between Soviet survival and defeat as Hitler’s army ran rampant. With the fate of the USSR hanging in the balance, Soviet propaganda chiefs sent their finest writers into the heat of battle. After six months of terrifying work, these men succeeded in creating an enduring epic of Stalingrad.

Their harrowing tales of valour and heroism offered hope for millions of readers. “Stalingrad lives!” went the rallying cry: the city had to live if the nation was to stave off defeat. In Stalingrad Lives Ian Garner brings together a selection of short stories written at and after the battle. They reveal, for the first time in English, the real Russian narrative of Stalingrad – an epic story of death, martyrdom, resurrection, and utopian beginnings. Following the authors into the hellish world of Stalingrad, Garner traces how tragedy was written as triumph. He uncovers how, dealing with loss and destruction on an unimaginable scale, Soviet readers and writers embraced the story of martyred Stalingrad, embedding it into the Russian psyche for decades to come.

Featuring lost work by Vasily Grossman alongside texts by luminaries such as Konstantin Simonov, Viktor Nekrasov, and Ilya Ehrenburg, Stalingrad Lives offers a literary perspective on the Soviet Union at war.

Ian Garner is a cultural historian and translator in Kingston, Ontario.