21. Quoted from M. N. Stroeva, Rezhisserskie iskaniia Stanislavskogo. 1898–1917
[Directorial pursuits of Stanislavsky, 1898–1917] (Moscow, 1973), p. 304.22. Quoted from Literaturnoe nasledstvo
[Literary heritage], vol. 72 (Moscow, 1965), p. 539.23.
Lenin o literature, p. 263.24.
Grazhdanin, 3 March 1902.25. Quoted from Letopis’ zhizni i tvorchestva A. M. Gor’kogo
[Chronicle of the life and work of A. M. Gorky], part 1 (Moscow, 1958), p. 372.26. Quoted from Russkaia literatura kontsa XIX–nachala XX v. 1901–1907
[Russian literature at the turn of the twentieth century: 1901–1907] (Moscow, 1971), p. 373.27.
Lenin o literature, pp. 148, 150.28. Ibid., pp. 157–58.
29. See Bol’shaia tsenzura: Pisateli i zhurnalisty v Strane Sovetov. 1917–1956
[Censorship on a grand scale: Writers and journalists in the Soviet Union, 1917–1956] (Moscow, 2005), p. 29.30.
Prometei [Prometheus], vol. 8, p. 61.31. M. Gor’kii, V. I. Lenin
(Moscow, 1974), p. 7. (Quotations hereafter taken from this edition.)32. Natan Altman, in conversation with the author.
33. Abram Efros, Profili
[Profiles] (Moscow, 1994), p. 15.34. See S. I. Grigor’ev, Pridvornaia tsenzura i obraz Verkhovnoi vlasti (1831–1917
) [Court censorship and the image of the Crown, 1831–1917] (St. Petersburg, 2007).35. Quoted from Valentin Serov v vospominaniiakh, dnevnikakh i perepiske sovremennikov
[Valentin Serov in the memoirs, diaries, and correspondence of his contemporaries], vol. 2 (Leningrad, 1971), p. 296.36.
Valentin Serov v perepiske, dokumentakh i interv’iu [Valentin Serov in correspondence, documents, and interviews], vol. 2 (Leningrad, 1989), pp. 6–7.37. Aleksandr Benua, Moi vospominaniia
[My memoirs], in five volumes, vols. 1–3, p. 634.38. Ibid.
39. Viktor Shklovsky, in conversation with the author.
40. This and subsequent quotations from V. I. Lenin, Lev Tolstoi, kak zerkalo russkoi revoliutsii
[Leo Tolstoy as a mirror of the Russian Revolution] (Moscow, 1970).41. Quoted from the collection Pod sozvezdiem topora: Petrograd 1917 goda—znakomyi i neznakomyi
[Under the sign of the ax: Petrograd, 1917—the familiar and the unknown] (Moscow, 1991), p. 50.42. Ibid., p. 56.
43. V. V. Rozanov, Nesovmestimye kontrasty zhitiia. Literaturno-esteticheskie raboty raznykh let
[Life’s incompatible contradictions: Literary-aesthetic works of various dates] (Moscow, 1990), p. 553.44. Ibid., p. 546.
A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Solomon Volkov is the award-winning author of several notable books about Russian culture, including The Magical Chorus, St. Petersburg: A Cultural History
, and Shostakovich and Stalin, published worldwide. After moving to the United States from the Soviet Union, he became a cultural commentator for Voice of America and later for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, broadcasting to the Soviet Union (and, later, Russia), where he discussed contemporary artistic developments in his former homeland. He lives in New York City with his wife, Marianna.
A NOTE ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR
The prizewinning translator Antonina W. Bouis is known for her work with contemporary Russian literature.