Andrei Alekseevich Amalrik | |
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Andrei Amalrik at a press conference in the Netherlands, 15 July 1976
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Native name | Андрей Алексеевич Амальрик |
Born |
Moscow |
May 12, 1938
Died | November 12, 1980 Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha, Spain |
(aged 42)
Occupation | historian, journalist, dissident |
Nationality | Soviet Russian |
Alma mater | Moscow State University |
Genre | history |
Literary movement | the dissident movement in the Soviet Union |
Notable works |
Involuntary Journey to Siberia Will the Soviet Union Survive Until 1984? |
Spouse | Gyuzel Makudinova |
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Signature |
Andrei Alekseevich Amalrik (Russian: Андре́й Алексе́евич Ама́льрик, 12 May 1938, Moscow – 12 November 1980, Guadalajara, Castile-La Mancha, Spain), alternatively spelled Andrei or Andrey, was a Russian writer and dissident.
Amalrik was best known in the Western world for his essay, Will the Soviet Union Survive Until 1984?
Amalrik was born in Moscow, during the time of Joseph Stalin's purges.
When the Soviet revolution broke out, Andrei's father, then a young man, volunteered for the Red Army. After the war he went into the film industry. Andrei's father fought in World War II in the Northern Fleet. He was overheard uttering negative views about Stalin's qualities as a military leader, which led to his arrest and imprisonment; he feared for his life, but shortly afterward was released to rejoin the army. In 1942 he was wounded at Stalingrad and invalided out of the service. Andrei's father's hardships explain Andrei's decision to become a historian. For his father, after climbing the educational ladder, was after the war refused permission to study at the Academy of Sciences' Institute of History on account of what authorities felt was his own compromised political past. But as Historian John Keep wrote: "Andrei has gone one better by not only writing history but by securing a place in it."
Andrei's father developed a serious heart condition which required constant nursing. This care was provided first by his wife, and on her death from cancer in 1959 by his son Andrei, until Andrei's arrest prevented him from ministering to his father's needs. He died when Andrei was in prison.
In high school, Andrei Amalrik was a restless student and truant. He was expelled a year before graduation. Despite this, he won admission to the history department at Moscow State University in 1959.
In 1963, he angered the university with a dissertation suggesting that Scandinavian warrior-traders and Greeks, rather than Slavs, played the principal role in developing the early Russian state in the ninth century. Amalrik refused to modify his views and was expelled from Moscow University.