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{{Short description|British historian (born 1959)}} | |||
'''Orlando Figes''' ({{IPAc-en|icon|ˈ|f|aɪ|dʒ|iː|z}}; born 20 November 1959) is a British historian of Russia, and Professor of History at ]. | |||
{{Use British English|date=August 2014}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}} | |||
{{Infobox academic | |||
| name = Orlando Figes | |||
| image = Orlando Figes Barcelona 2023 (cropped).jpg | |||
| caption = Figes in 2023 | |||
| birth_name = Orlando Guy Figes | |||
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1959|11|20|df=y}} | |||
| birth_place = London, England | |||
| death_date = | |||
| death_place = | |||
| citizenship = {{hlist|United Kingdom|Germany}} | |||
| spouse = {{marriage|Stephanie Palmer|1990}} | |||
| children = 2 | |||
| education = {{ubl|] (BA)|] (PhD)}} | |||
| thesis_title = The Political Transformation of Peasant Russia: Peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917–1920 | |||
| thesis_url = https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/271899 | |||
| thesis_year = 1987 | |||
| doctoral_advisor = ] | |||
| discipline = ] | |||
| workplaces = {{ubl|] (1984–1999)|] (1999–2022)}} | |||
| notable_students = {{ubl|]|]|]|]|]}} | |||
| main_interests = {{ubl|]|]}} | |||
| notable_works = '']'' (1996) | |||
| website = {{url|http://www.orlandofiges.com}} | |||
}} | |||
'''Orlando Guy Figes''' ({{IPAc-en|ɔː|ˈ|l|æ|n|d|ə|ʊ|_|ɡ|aɪ|_|ˈ|f|aɪ|dʒ|iː|z}}; born 20 November 1959)<ref name=whoswho>{{Who's Who|title=Figes, Prof. Orlando Guy|id=U15719|doi=10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U15719}}</ref> is a British and German historian and writer. He was a professor of history at ], where he was made Emeritus Professor on his retirement in 2022. | |||
Figes is known for his works on Russian history, such as '']'' (1996), ''Natasha's Dance'' (2002), '']'' (2007), ''Crimea'' (2010) and ''Just Send Me Word'' (2012). ''A People's Tragedy'' is a study of the ], and combines ] and ] with biographical details in a historical narrative. Figes has also contributed on European history more broadly with his book ''The Europeans'' (2019). | |||
==Overview== | |||
Figes is the son of the ] writer ]. His sister is the author and editor Kate Figes. He attended ] in north London from 1971-78. He read History at ], graduating with a rare ] in 1982, and completed his PhD at ], where he was a Fellow from 1984 to 1999. He was a Lecturer in History at the ] from 1987 to 1999, before taking the Chair of History at Birkbeck College, University of London. | |||
==Biography== | |||
He is known for his works on Russian history, in particular '']'' (1996), ''Natasha's Dance'' (2002), ''The Whisperers'' (2007), "Crimea" (2010) and "Just Send Me Word" (2012). Figes uses a broad range of methodologies, including social, cultural and oral history, and his writing combines literary and academic qualities. | |||
===Family background and education=== | |||
Born in ], London, on 20 November 1959, Figes is the son of John George Figes and the ] writer ], whose Jewish family fled ] in 1939. The author and editor ] was his elder sister.<ref>{{cite news|last=Tucker|first=Eva|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/sep/07/eva-figes |title=Eva Figes obituary |work=] |date= 7 September 2012|access-date=8 November 2018|location=London}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first=Hephzibah |last=Anderson |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/26/books/kate-figes-dead.html |title=Kate Figes, Feminist Author on Family Life, Dies at 62 |newspaper=] |date=26 December 2019 |access-date=6 September 2022 }}</ref> His father left the family when he was three.<ref name="OF-UK"/> | |||
He attended ] in north London (1971–78) and studied History at ], where his teachers were ] and ],<ref name="OF-UK"/> graduating with a ] in 1982. He wrote his undergraduate dissertation under Stone's guidance (with help from ]{{sfn|Snowman|2007|p=200}}) on '] and the Formation of a Radical Critique of Judaism' and published it as a journal article in the ''] Year Book'' in 1984.<ref name="OF-UK"/> He completed his PhD on 'The political transformation of peasant Russia: peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917–1920' under Norman Stone's supervision at ] in 1987.<ref name="CL"/><ref name="OF-UK"/>{{sfn|Snowman|2007|p=198}} It was his supervisor who suggested the shift of topic from German-Jewish philosophy to Russian peasant history.{{sfn|Snowman|2007|p=200}} He also claimed to have taken inspiration from the work of ] for his thesis, and received Shanin's recommendation to study with {{ill|Viktor Danilov (historian)|lt=Viktor Danilov|ru|Данилов, Виктор Петрович (историк)}} in ]. Danilov helped him get "unprecedented" access to the ] archives.<ref name="OF-UK"/> | |||
''A People's Tragedy'', which has been translated into twenty languages, is a study of the ], and combines social and political history with biographical details in a historical narrative. It was awarded the ], the ], the ], the Longman-History Today Book Prize, and the ]. | |||
===Academic career=== | |||
''Natasha's Dance'' won the ] Award for the best foreign book on East European History in Poland in 2009.<ref></ref> | |||
Figes was a Fellow of Trinity College from 1984 to 1999.<ref name="OF"/> He was appointed University Lecturer at the ] in 1987.{{sfn|Snowman|2007|p=198}} His students at Cambridge included the historians ] and ], the ] ], the journalist ], and the film producer ].<ref name="OF-UK"/> | |||
He succeeded ] as Professor of History at ] in 1999.{{sfn|Snowman|2007|p=198}} He announced his retirement from the post in 2022.<ref name="KF"/> | |||
''Natasha's Dance'' and ''The Whisperers'' were both short-listed for the Samuel Johnson Prize, making Figes the only writer to have been short-listed twice for the ]. ''The Whisperers'' was also short-listed for the ],<ref>{{dead link|date=August 2011}}</ref> the ],<ref name="fluctuat1">{{cite web|url=http://livres.fluctuat.net/orlando-figes.html |title=Orlando Figes |publisher=Livres.fluctuat.net |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> and the ].<ref name=autogenerated2></ref> ''Crimea: The Last Crusade'', on the ] of 1853-56, was published in 2010. | |||
He has served on the editorial board of the journal '']'' since at least 2011,<ref name="RH11"/><ref name="RH24"/> writes for the international press, broadcasts on television and radio, reviews for '']'', and is a fellow of the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rslit.org/people|title=Current RSL Fellows|publisher=Royal Society of Literature|access-date=18 March 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121002061545/http://www.rslit.org/people|archive-date=2 October 2012}}</ref> | |||
During his career, he was involved in an international ] for history teachers in Russian universities organised by the ].{{fact|date=June 2024}} | |||
His books have been translated into French, German, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Russian, Czech, Slovak, Polish, Estonian, Latvian, Slovenian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Greek, Turkish, Hebrew, Georgian, Korean, Japanese and Chinese.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/orlando.php |title=Orlando Figes [Author and Professor of Russian History] |publisher=Orlandofiges.com |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> | |||
==Writing== | |||
Figes also writes for the international press, broadcasts on television and radio, and reviews books for the '']''. He is a Fellow of the ].<ref>{{dead link|date=August 2011}}</ref> | |||
===Works on the Russian Revolution=== | |||
Figes's first three books were on the ] and the ]. ''Peasant Russia, Civil War'' (1989) was a detailed study of the peasantry in the ] region during the Revolution and the Civil War (1917–21). Using village Soviet archives, Figes emphasised the autonomous nature of the agrarian revolution during 1917–18, showing how it developed according to traditional peasant notions of social justice independently of the ], the ] or other urban-based parties.<ref>Figes, Orlando, ''Peasant Russia, Civil War'', p. xxi.</ref> He also demonstrated how the function of the rural ] was transformed in the course of the Civil War as they were taken over by younger and more literate peasants and migrant townsmen, many of them veterans of the First World War or Red Army soldiers, who became the rural bureaucrats of the emerging Bolshevik regime. | |||
'']'' (1996) is a panoramic history of the Revolution from 1891 to the death of ] in 1924. It combines social and political history and interweaves through the public narrative the personal stories of several representative figures, including ], the writer ], Prince ] and General ], as well as unknown peasants and workers. Figes wrote that he had "tried to present the revolution not as a march of abstract social forces and ideologies but as a human event of complicated individual tragedies".<ref>Figes, Orlando, ''A People's Tragedy'', 1996, p. xvii.</ref> Left-wing critics have represented Figes as a conservative because of his negative assessment of Lenin and his focus on the individual and "the random succession of chance events" rather than on the collective actions of the masses.<ref>Haynes, Michael, and Wolfreys, Jim, ''History and Revolution'', London: Verso, 2007, p. 15.</ref> Others have situated Figes among the so-called 'revisionist' historians of the Revolution who attempted to explain its political development in terms of social history.<ref>Keep, John, "Great October?" in ''The Times Literary Supplement'', 23 August 1996, p. 5.</ref> In 2008, ] listed ''A People's Tragedy'' as one of the "hundred most influential books since the war".<ref>Times Literary Supplement, 30 December 2008.</ref> In 2013 ] named '']'' one of his 'top 100 books'.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/oct/01/david-bowie-books-kerouac-milligan|title=David Bowie's top 100 must-read books|first=Liz|last=Bury|date=1 October 2013|access-date=8 October 2017|website=Theguardian.com}}</ref> | |||
==Personal life== | |||
Figes is the son of the ] writer ]. His sister is the author and editor Kate Figes. He is married to the human-rights lawyer Stephanie Palmer, a Senior Lecturer in Law at ] and Barrister at ] London. They have two daughters, Lydia and Alice. He lives in Cambridge, London and ] in Italy. He is a supporter of Chelsea Football Club.<ref>www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article5864399.ece</ref> | |||
''Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917'' (1999), co-written with {{ill|Boris Kolonitskii|ru|Колоницкий, Борис Иванович}}, analyses the political language, revolutionary songs, visual symbols and historical ideas that animated the revolutionary crowds of 1917.<ref>''Journal of Cold War Studies'', Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 2000, pp. 122–25.</ref> | |||
==Works on the Russian Revolution== | |||
''Revolutionary Russia: 1891–1991'' is a short introduction to the subject published as part of the relaunch of ] in the United Kingdom in 2014.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pelicanbooks.com/ |title=Pelican Books |publisher=Pelican Books |access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> In it Figes argues for the need to see the Russian Revolution in a longer time-frame than most historians have allowed. He states that his aim is 'to chart one hundred years of history as a single revolutionary cycle. In this telling the Revolution starts in the nineteenth century (and more specifically in 1891, when the public's reaction to the famine crisis set it for the first time on a collision course with the autocracy) and ends with the collapse of the Soviet regime in 1991.'<ref>{{cite book|title=Revolutionary Russia, 1891-1991: A History: Orlando Figes: 9780805091311: Amazon.com: Books |isbn=978-0805091311 |last1=Figes |first1=Orlando |date=8 April 2014 |publisher=Macmillan }}</ref> | |||
Figes's first three books were on the ] and the ]. ''Peasant Russia, Civil War'' (1989) was a detailed study of the peasantry in the ] region during the Revolution and the Civil War (1917–21). Using village Soviet archives, Figes emphasized the autonomous nature of the agrarian revolution during 1917-18, showing how it developed according to traditional peasant notions of social justice independently of the ], the ] or other urban-based parties.<ref>Figes, Orlando, ''Peasant Russia, Civil War'', p. xxi.</ref> He also demonstrated how the function of the rural Soviets was transformed in the course of the Civil War as they were taken over by younger and more literate peasants and migrant townsmen, many of them veterans of the First World War or Red Army soldiers, who became the rural bureaucrats of the emerging Bolshevik regime. | |||
===''Natasha's Dance'' and Russian cultural history=== | |||
'']'' (1996) is a panoramic history of the Revolution from 1891 to the death of ] in 1924. It combines social and political history and interweaves through the public narrative the personal stories of several representative figures, including the writer ], Prince ] and General ], as well as unknown peasants and workers. Figes wrote that he had "tried to present the revolution not as a march of abstract social forces and ideologies but as a human event of complicated individual tragedies".<ref>Figes, Orlando, ''A People's Tragedy'', 1996, p. xvii.</ref> Left-wing critics have represented Figes as a conservative because of his negative assessment of Lenin and his focus on the individual and "the random succession of chance events" rather than on the collective actions of the masses.<ref>Haynes, Michael, and Wolfreys, Jim, ''History and Revolution'', London: Verso, 2007, p. 15.</ref> Others have situated Figes among the so-called 'revisionist' historians of the Revolution who attempted to explain its political development in terms of social history.<ref>Keep, John, "Great October?" in ''The Times Literary Supplement'', 23 August 1996, p. 5.</ref> | |||
Published in 2002, ''Natasha's Dance'' is a broad cultural history of Russia from the building of ] during the reign of ] in the early eighteenth century. Taking its title from a scene in ]'s '']'', where the young countess ] intuitively dances a peasant dance, it explores the tensions between the European and folk elements of Russian culture, and examines how the myth of the "]" and ] itself have been expressed by Russian writers, artists, composers and philosophers. It received positive reviews amongst British press.<ref>{{cite news |title=Books of the moment: What the papers say|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-telegraph/151553692/ |access-date=19 July 2024 |work=The Daily Telegraph |date=12 Oct 2002 |page=60}}</ref> | |||
Figes has also written essays on various Russian cultural figures, including ], ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/orlando-figes/ |title=Orlando Figes | The New York Review of Books |publisher=Nybooks.com |access-date=31 August 2011}}</ref> In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, ''The Tsar's Last Picture Show'', about the pioneering colour photographer in Tsarist Russia ].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documentaries/features/tsars-show.shtml |title=Four Documentaries – The Tsar's Last Picture Show |publisher=BBC |date=22 November 2007 |access-date=31 August 2011}}</ref> | |||
''Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917'' (1999), co-written with Boris Kolonitskii, analyses the political language, revolutionary songs, visual symbols and historical ideas that animated the revolutionary crowds of 1917.<ref>''Journal of Cold War Studies'', Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 2000, pp. 122-25.</ref> | |||
===''The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia''=== | |||
==''Natasha's Dance'' and Russian cultural history== | |||
{{Main article|The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia}} | |||
Published in 2002, ''Natasha's Dance'' is a broad cultural history of Russia from the building of ] during the reign of ] in the early eighteenth century. Taking its title from a scene in ]'s '']'', where the young countess ] intuitively dances a peasant dance, it explores the tensions between the European and folk elements of Russian culture, and examines how the myth of the "Russian soul" and the idea of "Russianness" itself have been expressed by Russian writers, artists, composers and philosophers. | |||
His book ''The Whisperers'' Figes followed the approach of ]. In partnership with the ], a human rights non-profit organization, Figes gathered several hundred private family archives from homes across Russia and carried out more than a thousand interviews with survivors as well as perpetrators of the Stalinist repressions.<ref name="RBME">{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/may/23/orlando-figes-translation-russia |title=Orlando Figes translation scrapped in Russia amid claims of inaccuracies |author1=Robert Booth |author2=] |date=23 May 2012 |work=] |access-date=23 May 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140830142832/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/may/23/orlando-figes-translation-russia |archive-date=30 August 2014}}</ref><ref>{{citation |last=Figes |first=Orlando |title=The Whisperers |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website) |url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/whisperers.php |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110313230604/http://www.orlandofiges.com/whisperers.php |archive-date=13 March 2011}}</ref> The material is stored by Memorial in its Moscow, St Petersburg and ] offices, and a selection of the documents and interviews is available on Figes's personal website.<ref>{{citation |last=Figes |first=Orlando |title=Archives |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website) |url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/archiveIndex.php |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231004065919/http://www.orlandofiges.com/archiveIndex.php |archive-date=4 October 2023}}</ref><ref>{{citation |last=Figes |first=Orlando |title=Interviews |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website) |url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/interviewIndex.php |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231204024845/http://www.orlandofiges.com/interviewIndex.php |archive-date=4 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
The film director ] revealed that ''Natasha's Dance'' was the inspiration for his 2012 film ''Anna Karenina'', starring ] and ] with a screenplay by ].<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2092451/Stunning-Keira-Knightley-turns-great-performance-Anna-Karenina.html?ito=feeds-newsxml | location=London | work=Daily Mail | first=Baz | last=Bamigboye | title=Stunning as always: Keira Knightley turns in a great performance as Anna Karenina | date=2012-01-27}}</ref> Figes is credited as the historical consultant on the film<ref></ref> | |||
Translated into more than twenty languages,<ref>His books have been translated into French, German, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Russian, Czech, Slovak, Polish, Estonian, Latvian, Slovenian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Greek, Turkish, Hebrew, Georgian, Korean, Japanese and Chinese. {{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/orlando.php |title=Orlando Figes ] as "one of the best literary monuments to the ]"<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Schaaf |first=Matthew |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2007/12/stalin-russia-figes-soviet |title=Secrets of the state |magazine=New Statesman |access-date=31 August 2011}}</ref> In it Figes underlined the importance of oral testimonies for the recovery of the history of repression in the former Soviet Union. While conceding that, "like all memory, the testimony given in an interview is unreliable", he said that oral testimony "can be cross-examined and tested against other evidence".<ref>''The Whisperers'' (London, 2007), p. 636.</ref> | |||
Figes has also written essays on various Russian cultural figures, including ], ], ] <!--Andrei or Oleg?: and ]-->.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nybooks.com/contributors/orlando-figes/ |title=Orlando Figes | The New York Review of Books |publisher=Nybooks.com |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, ''The Tsar's Last Picture Show'', about the pioneering colour photographer in Tsarist Russia ].<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/documentaries/features/tsars-show.shtml |title=Four Documentaries - The Tsar's Last Picture Show |publisher=BBC |date=2007-11-22 |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> | |||
''The Whisperers'' deals mainly with the impact of repression on private life. It examines the influence of the Soviet regime and its campaigns of terror on family relationships, emotions and beliefs, moral choices, issues of personal and social identity, and collective memory. According to Figes, 'the real power and lasting legacy of the ] system were neither in structures of the state, nor in the cult of the leader, but, as the Russian historian Mikhail Gefter once remarked, "in the ] that entered into all of us".'<ref>Figes, ''The Whisperers'', p. xxxii.</ref> | |||
==Oral history and ''The Whisperers''== | |||
The book includes a detailed study of the Soviet writer ], who became a leading figure in the ] and a propagandist in the ] during Stalin's final years. Figes drew on the closed sections of Simonov's archive in the ] and on the archives of the poet's wife and son to produce his study of this major Soviet establishment figure.<ref>''Times Literary Supplement'', 8 February 2008.</ref> | |||
Figes contracted the ], a human rights non-profit, to gather several hundred private family archives from homes across Russia.<ref name=booth/> Through the Memorial Society he carried out more than a thousand interviews with survivors as well as perpetrators of the Stalinist repressions for his book ''The Whisperers''. This represents one of the biggest collections of documents about private life in the Stalin era. Housed in the ] in Moscow, St Petersburg and Perm, many of these valuable research materials are available on line.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com |title=Orlando Figes [Home] |publisher=Orlandofiges.com |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> | |||
On 4 December 2008, the St Petersburg offices of Memorial were raided by the police and the entire electronic archive, including the materials collected with Figes for ''The Whisperers'', was confiscated by the authorities. Figes condemned the police raid, accusing the Russian authorities of trying to ].<ref name="Harding">{{cite news |author=Harding |first=Luke |date=7 December 2008 |title=British scholar rails at police seizure of anti-Stalin archive |publisher=] |newspaper=] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/dec/07/russian-police-seize-archive-repression |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130905091003/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/dec/07/russian-police-seize-archive-repression |archive-date=5 September 2013}}</ref> He organised an open protest letter to President ] and other Russian leaders, which was signed by several hundred leading academics from across the world.<ref name="Index on Censorship">{{cite web |last=Figes |first=Orlando |date=8 December 2008 |title=Blog Archive – An open letter to President Medvedev |url=http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2008/12/08/an-open-letter-to-president-medvedev |access-date= |publisher=]}}</ref> After several court hearings, the materials were finally returned to Memorial in May 2009. | |||
Translated into more than twenty languages, ''The Whisperers'' was described by ] as "one of the best literary monuments to the ], on a par with '']'' and the prose of ]."<ref>{{cite web|last=Schaaf |first=Matthew |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2007/12/stalin-russia-figes-soviet |title=Secrets of the state |publisher=''New Statesman'' |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> In it Figes underlined the importance of oral testimonies for the recovery of the history of repression in the former Soviet Union. While conceding that, "like all memory, the testimony given in an interview is unreliable", he has claimed that oral testimonies are, on the whole, "more reliable than literary memoirs, which have usually been seen as a more authentic record of the past". The reason he gives is that 'unlike a book, can be cross-examined and tested against other evidence to disentangle true memories from received or imagined ones'.<ref>''The Whisperers'' (London, 2007), p. 636.</ref> | |||
Figes saw his first Russian translation contract for ''The Whisperers'' cancelled in March 2009 by publisher {{ill|Attikus (publisher)|lt=Attikus|ru|Азбука-Аттикус}}, who cited commercial reasons. Figes suggested that the book was "inconvenient" to ]'s government and that the real explanation for the refusal to publish lay in "political pressure".<ref>{{citation |last=Figes |first=Orlando |title=What's The Real Reason My Book on Stalin Isn't Being Published in Russia? |publisher=] |date=4 March 2009 |url=https://www.rferl.org/a/Trying_To_Bury_An_Inconvenient_History/1503708.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180217082650/https://www.rferl.org/a/Trying_To_Bury_An_Inconvenient_History/1503708.html |archive-date=17 February 2018}}</ref><ref name="RBME"/><ref name="PRSC">{{citation |last1=Reddaway |first1=Peter |author-link=Peter Reddaway |last2=Cohen |first2=Stephen F. |author-link2=Stephen F. Cohen |title=Orlando Figes and Stalin's Victims |publisher=] |date=23 May 2012 |url=http://www.thenation.com/article/orlando-figes-and-stalins-victims |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150905123156/http://www.thenation.com/article/orlando-figes-and-stalins-victims |archive-date=5 September 2015}}</ref> A second translation project was abandoned by the publisher {{ill|Corpus (publisher)|lt=Corpus|ru|Corpus}} and the rights owner ] in 2010 after one of Memorial's researchers reported that she found ]s, incorrect interpretations and factual errors in the book.<ref name="PRSC"/> Figes was notified of the decision in April 2011 in a letter which suggested that its publication would cause offence in Russia.<ref name="RBME"/><ref name="PRSC"/> Figes offered to revise the book, but his offer was ignored. <ref name="RBME"/> | |||
In contrast to other books that have focused on the external facts of Soviet repression, ''The Whisperers'' deals mainly with the impact of repression on internal life. It examines the influence of the Soviet regime and its campaigns of Terror on family relationships, emotions and beliefs, moral choices, issues of personal and social identity, and collective memory. Describing the subject-matter of his book, Figes claims that 'the real power and lasting legacy of the ] system were neither in structures of the state, nor in the cult of the leader, but, as the Russian historian Mikhail Gefter once remarked, "in the ] that entered into all of us".'<ref>Figes, ''The Whisperers'', p. xxxii.</ref> | |||
===''Just Send Me Word''=== | |||
Figes has included in ''The Whisperers'' a detailed study of the Soviet poet ], who became a leading figure in the Soviet Writers' Union and a propagandist in the "anti-cosmopolitan" campaign during Stalin's final years. Figes drew on the closed sections of Simonov's archive in the ] and on the archives of the poet's wife and son to produce his study of this major Soviet establishment figure.<ref>''Times Literary Supplement'', 8 February 2008.</ref> | |||
Published in 2012, ''Just Send Me Word''<ref>The title of the book is taken from the poem "In Dream" by ], translated by ]: "Black and enduring separation/I share equally with you/Why weep? Give me your hand/Promise to appear in a dream again./You and I are like two mountains/And in this world we cannot meet./Just send me word/At midnight sometime through the stars."</ref> is a true story based on 1,246 letters smuggled in and out of the ] labour camp between 1946 and 1955 between Lev Mishchenko (a prisoner) and Svetlana Ivanova (his girlfriend in Moscow). There are 647 letters from Lev to Svetlana, and 599 from her to him. They form part of a family archive discovered by Memorial and delivered in three trunks to their Moscow offices in 2007.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2012/jun/21/love-against-all-odds |title=Love Against All Odds |magazine=] |publisher=Nybooks.com |access-date=24 July 2015|last1=Scammell |first1=Michael }}</ref> The letters are the largest known collection of private correspondence from the Gulag, according to Memorial.<ref>"A Note From Memorial" in ''Just Send Me Word'', p. 297.</ref> | |||
Figes was given exclusive access to the letters and other parts of the archive, which is also based on interviews with the couple when they were in their nineties, and the archives of the labour camp itself. Figes raised the finance for the transcription of the letters, which are housed in Memorial's offices in Moscow and will become available to researchers in 2013. According to Figes, "Lev's letters are the only major real-time record of daily life in the Gulag that has ever come to light."<ref>{{cite magazine |first=Orlando |last=Figes |url=https://foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/06/20/dont_go_there?page=0,2 |title=Don't Go There: Chasing the dying memories of Soviet trauma |magazine=Foreign Policy |date=July–August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110704131447/http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/06/20/dont_go_there?page=0,2 |archive-date=4 July 2011}}</ref> | |||
The Whisperers came under scrutiny in 2012 when The Guardian reported allegations that the book contained "inaccuracies and factual errors."<ref name=booth>{{cite web |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/may/23/orlando-figes-translation-russia |title=Orlando Figes translation scrapped in Russia amid claims of inaccuracies |author1=Robert Booth |author2=Miriam Elder |date=23 May 2012 |work=] |accessdate=23 May 2012}}</ref> The charge was made by the Russian publisher, Corpus, which declined to publish the book in Russia out of concern for the individuals interviewed and their families. Figes refuted many of the alleged inaccuracies, pointing out the errors introduced by the Russian translators, whilst expressing his regret for 'the handful of genuine errors' that remained.<ref name=booth/> | |||
The book tells the story of Lev and Svetlana who met as students in the Physics Faculty of ] in 1935. Separated by the ] in 1941, when Lev was enrolled in the ], they made contact in 1946, when he wrote from Pechora. Figes uses the letters to explore conditions in the labour camp and to tell the love story, ending in 1955 with Lev's release and marriage to Svetlana. The book documents five illegal trips made by Svetlana to visit Lev by smuggling herself into the labour camp. | |||
==''Just Send Me Word''== | |||
Published in 2012, ''Just Send Me Word'' is a true love story based on 1,246 letters smuggled in and out of the ] labour camp between 1946 and 1955. The letters were exchanged between Lev Mishchenko, a prisoner in Pechora, and Svetlana Ivanova, his girlfriend in Moscow. There are 647 letters from Lev to Svetlana; and 599 from her to him. They form part of a family archive discovered by the ] and delivered in three trunks to their Moscow offices in 2007 . The letters are the largest known collection of private correspondence from the Gulag, according to Memorial.<ref></ref> | |||
Writing in the '']'', ] called ''Just Send Me Word'' "a unique contribution to Gulag scholarship as well as a study of the universal power of love".<ref>{{cite web |author=Simon Sebag Montefiore |url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/3aff9d82-a4c3-11e1-9908-00144feabdc0.html#axzz221tVLpsB |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221211221240/https://www.ft.com/content/3aff9d82-a4c3-11e1-9908-00144feabdc0#axzz221tVLpsB |archive-date=11 December 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Labour of love |work=] |date=26 May 2012 |access-date=24 July 2015 }}</ref> Several reviewers highlighted the book's literary qualities, pointing out that it 'reads like a novel'<ref>{{cite web|author=Timothy Phillips |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/arts/book/staying-alive-with-the-language-of-love-7788206.html |title=Staying alive with the language of love - Life Style Books - Life & Style - London Evening Standard |work=The Standard |date=25 May 2012 |access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/9272728/A-Page-in-the-Life-Orlando-Figes.html |title=A Page in the Life: Orlando Figes |newspaper=Daily Telegraph |access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> | |||
Figes was given exclusive access to the letters and other parts of the archive to write Just send Me Word, which is also based on interviews with the couple, when they were in their nineties, and the archives of the labour camp itself.Figes raised the finance for the transcription of the letters, which are housed in the Memorial Society in Moscow and will become available to researchers in 2013. According to Figes, "Lev's letters are the only major real-time record of daily life in the Gulag that has ever come to light." . | |||
===''Crimea''=== | |||
The book tells the story of Lev and Svetlana who met as students in the Physics Faculty of ] in 1935. Separated by the ] in 1941, when Lev was enrolled in the ], they made contact in 1946, when he wrote from Pechora. Figes uses the letters to explore conditions in the labour camp and to tell the love story, ending in 1955 with Lev's release and marriage to Svetlana. The book documents five illegal trips made by Svetlana to visit Lev by smuggling herself into the labour camp. | |||
'']'' is a panoramic history of the ] of 1853–56. Drawing extensively from Russian, French and Ottoman as well as British archives, it combines military, diplomatic, political and cultural history, examining how the war left a lasting mark on the national consciousness of Britain, France, Russia and Turkey. Figes sets the war in the context of the ], the diplomatic and political problems caused by the decay of the ]. In particular, he emphasises the importance of the religious struggle between Russia as the defender of the ] and France as the protector of the ] in the Ottoman Empire. He frames the war within a longer history of religious conflict between Christians and Muslims in the ], southern Russia and the ] that continues to this day. Figes stresses the religious motive of the Tsar ] in his bold decision to go to war, arguing that Nicholas was swayed by the ideas of the ] to invade ] and ] and encourage Slav revolts against the Ottomans, despite his earlier adherence to the Legitimist principles of the ]. He also shows how France and Britain were drawn into the war by popular ideas of ] that swept across Europe in the wake of the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848. As one reviewer wrote, Figes shows "how the cold war of the Soviet era froze over fundamental fault lines that had opened up in the 19th century."<ref>{{cite news|author=Angus Macqueen |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/oct/10/crimea-last-crusade-figes-review |title=Crimea: The Last Crusade by Orlando Figes – review|newspaper=The Observer |date= 10 October 2010|access-date=31 August 2011 |location=London}}</ref> | |||
=== ''The Europeans'' === | |||
The title of the book is taken from the poem "In Dream" by ], translated by ]: "Black and enduring separation/I share equally with you/Why weep? Give me your hand/Promise to appear in a dream again./You and I are like two mountains/And in this world we cannot meet./Just send me word/At midnight sometime through the stars." | |||
''The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture'' is a panoramic history of nineteenth-century European culture told through the biographies of ], the opera singer, composer and salon hostess, her husband ], an art expert and theatre manager, and the Russian writer ], who had a long love affair with Pauline Viardot and lived with the couple in a ''ménage à trois'' for over twenty years. They lived at various times in ], ], London, Courtavenel and ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture|last=Figes|first=Orlando|publisher=Allen Lane|year=2019|isbn=978-0241004890|location=London|pages=3–4}}</ref> | |||
Figes argues that the ] formed through new technologies (especially the railways and lithographic printing), mass foreign travel, market forces, and the development of ], enabling writers, artists and composers as well as their publishers to enter foreign markets through the growth of literary translations, touring companies and international publishing. In the continent as a whole, the arts thus became "a unifying force between nations" leading to the emergence of a modern European 'canon' so that, by 1900, "the same books were being read across the Continent, the same paintings reproduced, the same music played at home or heard in concert halls, and the same operas performed in all the major theatres of Europe".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.historyextra.com/period/modern/orlando-figes-transformation-europe-culture-europe-europeans-podcast/|title=Orlando Figes on the transformation of Europe|last=Dinning|first=Rachel|date=30 September 2019|website=BBC History Extra|access-date=2 October 2019}}</ref> | |||
Writing in the ''Financial Times'', ] called ''Just Send Me Word'' "a unique contribution to Gulag scholarship as well as a study of the universal power of love". Several reviewers highlighted the book's literary qualities, pointing out that it 'reads like a novel' . | |||
''The Europeans'' was published in the United Kingdom in September 2019 and received positive reviews by ]<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/07/the-europeans-making-cosmopolitan-culture-orlando-figes-review|title=The Europeans by Orlando Figes review – the importance of a shared culture|last=Boyd|first=William|date=7 September 2019|work=The Guardian|access-date=1 October 2019}}</ref> and ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Christiansen |first=Rupert |date=2019-09-15 |title=A ménage a trois that transformed European culture |language=en-GB |work=The Sunday Telegraph |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/non-fiction/menage-troisthat-transformedeuropean-culture/ |access-date= |issn=0307-1235}}</ref> | |||
''Just Send Me Word'' is scehduled for publication in German, French, Italian, Dutch, Polish, Swedish, Portuguese, Norwegian, Finnish and Danish. | |||
=='' |
=== ''The Story of Russia'' === | ||
Figes published ''The Story of Russia'' in September 2022.<ref name="KF"/> The book is a general history of Russia from the earliest times to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It focuses on the ideas and myths that have structured the Russians' understanding of their history, and explores what Figes calls the "structural continuities" of Russian history, such as the sacralisation of power and patrimonial autocracy. ''The Guardian'' described it as "An indispensable survey of more than 1,000 years of history shows how myth and fact mix dangerously in the tales this crucial country tells about itself" <ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/sep/01/the-story-of-russia-by-orlando-figes-review-what-putin-sees-in-the-past | title=The Story of Russia by Orlando Figes review – what Putin sees in the past | newspaper=The Guardian | date=September 2022 | last1=Kendall | first1=Bridget }}</ref> A reviewer in ''The Spectator'' called it "a saga of multi-millennial identity politics"; Figes argues that no other country has so often changed its origin story,<ref>{{cite magazine |first=Sara |last=Wheeler |url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/how-putin-manipulated-history-to-help-russians-feel-good-again |title=How Putin manipulated history to help Russians feel good again |type=review |magazine=The Spectator |date=3 September 2022 |access-date=6 September 2022 }}</ref> its "istories continuously reconfigured and repurposed to suit its present needs and reimagine its future".<ref>Quotation from the introduction. {{cite news |first=Bridget |last=Kendall |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/sep/01/the-story-of-russia-by-orlando-figes-review-what-putin-sees-in-the-past |title=The Story of Russia by Orlando Figes review – what Putin sees in the past |newspaper=The Guardian |date=1 September 2022 |access-date=6 September 2022 }}</ref> | |||
==Plays== | |||
''Crimea: The Last Crusade'' is a panoramic history of the ] of 1853-56. Drawing extensively from Russian, French and Ottoman as well as British archives, it combines military, diplomatic, political and cultural history, examining how the war left a lasting mark on the national consciousness of Britain, France, Russia and Turkey. Figes sets the war in the context of the ], the diplomatic and political problems caused by the decay of the ]. In particular, he emphasizes the importance of the religious struggle between Russia as the defender of the ] and France as the protector of the ] in the Ottoman Empire. He frames the war within a longer history of religious conflict between Christians and Muslims in the ], southern Russia and the ] that continues to this day. Figes stresses the religious motive of the Tsar ] in his bold decision to go to war, arguing that Nicholas was swayed by the ideas of the ] to invade ] and ] and encourage Slav revolts against the Ottomans, despite his earlier adherence to the Legitimist principles of the ]. He also shows how France and Britain were drawn into the war by popular ideas of ] that swept across Europe in the wake of the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848. As one reviewer wrote, Figes shows "how the cold war of the Soviet era froze over fundamental fault lines that had opened up in the 19th century."<ref>{{cite news|author=Angus Macqueen |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/oct/10/crimea-last-crusade-figes-review |title=Crimea: The Last Crusade by Orlando Figes – review|publisher=''The Observer'' |date= 2010-10-10|accessdate=2011-08-31 |location=London}}</ref> | |||
In 2023 Figes's debut play, ''The Oyster Problem'', was produced by the ] in London. The play is about the financial crisis of the writer ] in the last years of his life and the attempts of his literary friends, ], ] and ], to find him a sinecure. ] played the part of Flaubert and Philip Wilson directed. <ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2023/feb/15/the-oyster-problem-review-jermyn-street-theatre-london | title=The Oyster Problem review – the struggle to save Flaubert from himself | newspaper=The Guardian | date=15 February 2023 | last1=Gillinson | first1=Miriam }}</ref> Everything Theatre described ''The Oyster Problem'' as "a remarkable pearl of a play; a patchwork of anecdotes that welcomes us into the private life of Gustave Flaubert and his literary contemporaries" <ref>{{cite web | url=https://everything-theatre.co.uk/2023/02/review-the-oyster-problem-jermyn-street-theatre/ | title=Review: The Oyster Problem, Jermyn Street Theatre | date=18 February 2023 }}</ref> | |||
==Film and television work== | |||
==Gulag love story== | |||
Figes has contributed frequently to radio and television broadcasts in the United Kingdom and around the world. In 1999 he wrote a six-part educational TV series on the history of Communism under the title ''Red Chapters''. Produced by Opus Television and broadcast in the UK, the 25-minute films featured turning-points in the history of Soviet Russia, China, and Cuba.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1086640/ |title=Red Chapters: Turning Points in the History of Communism (TV Series 1999)|publisher=IMDb.com|access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, ''The Tsar's Last Picture Show'', about the pioneering colour photographer in Russia ].<ref name="autogenerated1"/> In 2007 he wrote and presented two 60-minute ] programmes on radio entitled ''Stalin's Silent People'' which used recordings from his oral history project with Memorial that formed the basis of his book ''The Whisperers''. The programmes are available on Figes's website.<ref name=figeswebsite/> | |||
In 2011 Figes revealed that his next book would be a love story set in the Gulag based on 1,500 uncensored letters smuggled in and out of the ] labour camp from 1946, interviews with the couple, Lev and Sveta Mishchenko, who had met in the 1930s as students at the Physics Faculty of ], and the archives of the labour camp itself. According to Figes, "Lev's letters are the only major real-time record of daily life in the Gulag that has ever come to light."<ref></ref> | |||
Figes was the historical consultant on the film '']'' (2012), directed by ], starring ] and ] with a screenplay by ].<ref name="Anna Karenina cast">{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1781769/fullcredits#cast |title=''Anna Karenina'' cast|publisher=IMDb.com|access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> He was also credited as the historical consultant on the 2016 BBC '']'' television series directed by ] with a screenplay by ]. Interviewed by the '']'', Figes defended the series against criticism that it was "too Jane Austen" and "too English".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/12087338/Those-who-complained-about-War-and-Peace-are-whingers-says-historical-advisor-Orlando-Figes.html|title=Those who complained about War and Peace are 'whingers', says historical advisor Orlando Figes|first=Peter|last=Stanford|date=8 October 2017|access-date=8 October 2017|website=Telegraph.co.uk}}</ref> | |||
==Public activities in Russia== | |||
Figes has been critical of the ] government, in particular allegations that Putin has attempted to rehabilitate ] and impose his own agenda on history-teaching in Russian schools and universities.<ref>{{cite web|last=Schaaf |first=Matthew |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/2007/11/russia-putin-soviet-power |title=Vlad the Great |publisher=''New Statesman'' |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> He is involved in an international summer school for history teachers in Russian universities organised by the ]. | |||
==Theatrical adaptations== | |||
On 4 December 2008, the St Petersburg offices of the ] were raided by the police. The entire electronic archive of Memorial in St Petersburg, including the materials collected with Figes for ''The Whisperers'', was confiscated by the authorities. Figes condemned the police raid, accusing the Russian authorities of trying to ].<ref></ref> Figes organised an open protest letter to President ] and other Russian leaders, which was signed by several hundred leading academics from across the world.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2008/12/08/an-open-letter-to-president-medvedev |title=Blog Archive » An open letter to President Medvedev |publisher=Index on Censorship |date=2008-12-08 |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> After several court hearings, the materials were finally returned to Memorial in May 2009. | |||
Figes's ''The Whisperers'' was adapted and performed by ] as a one-man play, ''Stalin's Favourite''. Based on Figes's portrayal of the writer ], the play was performed in London at the ] in November 2011<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.londontheatre.co.uk/theatre-news/news/national-theatre-announce-new-season-to-jan-2012 |title=National Theatre announce new Season to Jan 2012 |website=London Theatre |date=8 June 2016 |access-date=6 September 2022 }}</ref> and at the ] in January 2012.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.unicorntheatre.com/archive/2012 |title=Past Productions, 2012 |date=21 November 2012 |publisher=] |access-date=6 September 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Sanctions by Russian government== | |||
On 2 March 2009, the contract to publish ''The Whisperers'' in Russia was cancelled by the publishing house Atticus, claiming financial reasons. Figes suspects that the decision was partly influenced by the politics surrounding the police raid against Memorial.<ref>{{cite web|last=Figes |first=Orlando |url=http://www.rferl.org/content/Trying_To_Bury_An_Inconvenient_History/1503708.html |title=What's The Real Reason My Book On Stalin Isn't Being Published In Russia? |publisher=Rferl.org |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> The book will be published by the charitable organisation Dinastia, which financed the translation from the start. | |||
Figes has been critical of the ] government, in particular alleging that Putin has attempted to rehabilitate ] and impose his own agenda on history-teaching in Russian schools and universities.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Figes |first=Orlando |date=29 November 2007 |title=Vlad the Great |url=https://www.newstatesman.com/long-reads/2007/11/russia-putin-soviet-power |access-date= |website=] |language=en-US}}</ref> He condemned the arrest by the ] of historian ] as part of a "Putinite campaign against freedom of historical research and expression".<ref>{{cite news |author=Luke Harding |date=15 October 2009 |title=Russian historian arrested in clampdown on Stalin era |newspaper=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/oct/15/russia-gulag-historian-arrested |access-date=}}</ref> | |||
In December 2013, Figes wrote a long piece in the US journal '']'' on the ] demonstrations in ] suggesting that a referendum on Ukraine's foreign policy and the country's possible partition might be a preferable alternative to the possibility of civil war and military intervention by Russia.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Figes |first=Orlando |date=16 December 2013 |title=Is There One Ukraine? |url=http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/140560/orlando-figes/is-there-one-ukraine |magazine=Foreign Affairs |access-date=24 July 2015}}</ref> In June 2023, he said that Russia "needs to be completely defeated" in the ], "not just for Ukraine's sake, but for Russia's sake".<ref>{{cite news |title='We Want To Defeat Russia,' Says British Historian Figes, 'But We Don't Want To Push It Into Civil War And Chaos' |url=https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-war-defeat-civil-war/32457747.html |work=Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty |date=13 June 2023}}</ref> | |||
Figes has also condemned the arrest by the ] of historian ] as part of a "Putinite campaign against freedom of historical research and expression".<ref>, ''The Guardian'', 15 October 2009.</ref> | |||
In February 2024, Figes was ] with denial of entry into Russia by ]'s government, together with other British academics and experts, for criticizing the war in Ukraine and allegedly demonizing Russia. <ref>{{Cite web |title=Russia slaps sanctions on British officials, historians and academics |website=] |url=https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/russia-slaps-sanctions-british-officials-academics-2024-02-12/ |access-date=2024-04-05}}</ref><ref>{{citation |title=Foreign Ministry statement on personal sanctions on members of the UK military and political establishment as well as scientific and academic community |publisher=] |date=12 February 2024 |url=https://mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/1931130 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20240604032559/https://mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/1931130/ |archive-date=4 June 2024}}</ref> | |||
At the ] in August 2011 Figes revealed that he had made some charitable donations in Russia from the proceeds of his book ''The Whisperers''.<ref></ref> | |||
==Amazon reviews controversy== | |||
==Broadcasts== | |||
In 2010, Figes posted several pseudonymous reviews under the moniker "orlando-birkbeck" on the UK site of the online bookseller ]. The reviews criticised works by two other British historians of Russia, ] and ], but praised other books, including one of his own. After initially denying that he wrote these reviews, Figes took full responsibility for them, apologized and agreed to pay for legal costs and damages to Polonsky and Service who launched a lawsuit against Figes.<ref>{{citation|last=Topping|first=Alexandra|title=Historian Orlando Figes agrees to pay damages for fake reviews|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/jul/16/orlando-figes-fake-amazon-reviews|work=The Guardian|date=16 July 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210218035700/https://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/apr/23/historian-orlando-figes-amazon-reviews-rivals |archive-date=18 February 2021}}</ref><ref>{{citation|title=Orlando Figes to pay fake Amazon review damages|publisher=BBC|date=17 July 2010|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-10670407|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308205952/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-10670407|archive-date=8 March 2021}}</ref><ref>{{citation|last=Appleyard|first=Bryan|author-link=Bryan Appleyard|title=O the Wild Charges He Made|date=3 October 2010|work=The Sunday Times|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/o-the-wild-charges-he-made-nk9vcqhdlb5|access-date=5 March 2020}}</ref><ref name="PRSC"/> | |||
Figes has contributed frequently to radio and television broadcasts in the United Kingdom and around the world. In 1999 he wrote a six-part educational TV series on the history of Communism under the title ''Red Chapters''. Produced by Opus Television and broadcast in the UK, the 25-minute films featured turning-points in the history of Soviet Russia, China, and Cuba.<ref></ref> In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, ''The Tsar's Last Picture Show'', about the pioneering colour photographer in Tsarist Russia ].<ref name="autogenerated1"/> In 2007 he wrote and presented two 60-minute ] programmes on radio entitled ''Stalin's Silent People'' which used recordings from his oral history project with Memorial that formed the basis of his book ''The Whisperers''. The programmes are available on Figes's website.<ref>.</ref> | |||
==Views== | |||
==Theatrical adaptations== | |||
In an interview with ] in 1997, Figes described himself as "a ] supporter and 'a bit of a ]', though he confessed, when it came to the Russian revolution, to being mildly pro-]."<ref name="Marr">{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/makers-of-their-own-tragedy-1275114.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220524/https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/makers-of-their-own-tragedy-1275114.html |archive-date=24 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title = Makers of their own tragedy|work = ] |date = 23 October 2011}}</ref> | |||
Figes' ''The Whisperers'' was adapted and performed by Rupert Wickham as ''Stalin's Favourite''. Based on Figes' portrayal of the writer ], the play was performed in the ] in London<ref></ref> followed by a season of performances at the ] in London.<ref></ref> | |||
In 2018, when asked to comment on the popularity of ] among the student supporters of ], he expressed concern that British university textbooks were drawing a "moral equivalence" between the ] of the Soviet Union and the "murder and destruction" of Stalinism.<ref name="DC"/> | |||
==Controversy over alleged reviews== | |||
In 2010, Figes posted several pseudonymous reviews on the UK site of the online bookseller ], including some where he criticized books by two other British historians of Russia, ] and Rachel Polonsky, while praising his own book. Initially denying responsibility for the reviews, he threatened legal action against those who suggested he was the author.<ref name=Topping>,''The Guardian'', 16 July 2010.</ref> Figes later claimed that his wife had written the reviews,<ref>David Rose ", ''Daily Mail,'' 17 April 2010 (retrieved 5 January 2013)</ref> before finally admitting to having posting the anonymous reviews,<ref></ref> issued an apology and agreed to pay legal costs and damages to Polonsky and Service, who had threatened to sue him for libel.<ref name=Topping/><ref>, '']'', 23 April 2010</ref><ref>, ''New York Times'', Dave Itzkoff, 19 July 2010.</ref><ref name="standard">,''London Evening Standard'', Diary, 7 October 2010.</ref><ref name="today">, ''History Today'', 21 July 2010.</ref> In an interview with the ''Sunday Times'' on 3 October 2010, Figes said that the two historians had also threatened to report him to the police for the reviews.<ref>Bryan Appleyard, "O the wild charges he made!", ''The Sunday Times'', 3 October 2010, Features section, pp. 50-53, 55, 57, in which Figes is quoted: "I will try to be as objective as possible. On the 23rd of April, I issued a public statement of apology and shortly after that I offered, through ], damages, legal costs and the undertakings I was asked for. But that wasn't enough. I was threatened with libel proceedings, even with being reported to the police.… The threats continued for three months."</ref> In response, Polonsky stated that Figes had engaged in a distortion of facts in his interview with the paper in his account of legal negotiations over the controversy.<ref name="standard" /> | |||
== Personal life == | |||
In December 2010 Figes told the Dutch newspaper '']'' that Polonsky and Service had used the threat of libel proceedings and made threats against his wife through Carter Ruck (although Polonsky had previously written her an email telling her how much her 'heart went out to her') in an attempt to force him to admit to new legal claims that were untrue. In August 2011 ''de Volkskrant'' published Polonsky's letter of response.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.volkskrant.nl/vk/nl/2844/Archief/article/detail/1082402/2010/12/23/De-angst-is-genetisch-die-zit-in-het-Russische-dna.dhtml |title=De angst is genetisch, die zit in het Russische dna|publisher=Volkskrant.nl |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> This stated that nothing in the draft apology proposed by her and Service during the legal correspondence was untrue. The letter further stated that Figes's wife had been included in the correspondence because legal costs had been incurred in the week during which she falsely claimed to be the author of the Amazon reviews. | |||
In 1990, Figes married Stephanie Palmer, a senior lecturer in law at ] and barrister at ]. They have two daughters. He divides his time between his homes in London and ] in Italy.<ref name=whoswho/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Orlando-Figes/e/B000APO9J8/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1|title = Orlando Figes|website = Amazon UK}}</ref> On 13 February 2017, Figes become a ].<ref name="TheEuropeans">{{cite news |last1=Coman |first1=Julian |title=The Europeans by Orlando Figes review – a very continental menage a trois |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/30/europeans-three-lives-making-of-cosmopolitan-culture-orlando-figes-review |access-date=1 May 2024 |work=The Guardian |date=30 September 2019}}</ref> | |||
==Prizes== | ==Prizes and honours== | ||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924'' | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924''<ref name="Marr"/> | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924'' | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924'' | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924'' | |||
* 2009 – Przeglad Wschodni Award ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia''.<ref name=figeswebsite>{{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/orlando.php |title=Orlando Figes [Author and Professor of Russian History] |publisher=Orlandofiges.com |access-date=31 August 2011}}</ref> | |||
* 2021 – Antonio Delgado Prize (Spain), ''The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture'' <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sgae.es/es-ES/SitePages/EstaPasandoDetalleActualidad.aspx?i=7374&s=7&p=1 |title=Orlando Figes gana el Premio Antonio Delgado a la Divulgación de la Propiedad Intelectual |publisher=Sgae.es |date=2018-12-03 |accessdate=2022-05-13}}</ref> | |||
In 2023, Figes was awarded an ] by the ] in ], ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Orlando Figes investido doctor honoris causa por la UIMP: 'Nos hemos equivocado con Rusia durante mucho tiempo' |url=https://www.uimp.es/portada-movil/orlando-figes-investido-doctor-honoris-causa-por-la-uimp.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230828135136/https://www.uimp.es/portada-movil/orlando-figes-investido-doctor-honoris-causa-por-la-uimp.html |archive-date=28 Aug 2023 |access-date=2023-09-16 |website=www.uimp.es |lang=es}}</ref> | |||
===Winner=== | |||
==Works== | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924'' | |||
* '''', Oxford: ], 1989, {{ISBN|0-19-822169-X}} | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924'' | |||
* |
* '']'', London: ], 1996, {{ISBN|0-7126-7327-X}} | ||
* with Boris Kolonitskii: ''Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917'', 1999, {{ISBN|0-300-08106-5}} | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924'' | |||
* ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia'', 2002, {{ISBN|0-14-029796-0}} | |||
* 1997 – ] ''A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924'' | |||
* ''The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia'', 2007, {{ISBN|978-0-8050-7461-1}}, {{ISBN|0-8050-7461-9}}, {{ISBN|978-0-8050-7461-1}}, {{ISBN|0-8050-7461-9}} | |||
* 2009 – ] ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia'' | |||
* ''Crimea: The Last Crusade'', Allen Lane, 2010. {{ISBN|978-0-7139-9704-0}} | |||
* ''Just Send Me Word: A True Story of Love and Survival in the Gulag'', Metropolitan Books, 2012. {{ISBN|978-0-8050-9522-7}} | |||
* ''Revolutionary Russia, 1891–1991'', Metropolitan Books, 2014, {{ISBN|9780805091311}} | |||
* ''Revolutionary Russia, 1891–1991'', ], 2014, {{ISBN|978-0141043678}} | |||
* ''The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture'', New York: Henry Holt and Co. 2019, {{ISBN|9781627792141}} | |||
* ''The Story of Russia'', Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022, {{ISBN|978-1526631749}} | |||
== |
==References== | ||
{{Reflist|30em|refs= | |||
<ref name="CL">{{citation |title=The political transformation of peasant Russia: peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917-1920, Orlando Guy Figes |publisher=] |access-date=22 May 2024 |url=https://idiscover.lib.cam.ac.uk/permalink/f/t9gok8/44CAM_ALMA21428133850003606}}</ref> | |||
* 2003 – Samuel Johnson Prize<ref></ref> ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia'' | |||
<ref name="DC">{{citation |last=Cancian |first=Dan |title=British universities accused of 'luring' millennials towards communism |work=] |date=18 January 2018 |url=https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/british-universities-accused-luring-millennials-towards-communism-1655693 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201021023559/https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/british-universities-accused-luring-millennials-towards-communism-1655693 |archive-date=21 October 2020}}</ref> | |||
* 2003 – Duff-Cooper Prize<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theduffcooperprize.org/test/ |title=Home |publisher=The Duff Cooper Prize |date= |accessdate=2011-08-31}}</ref> ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia'' | |||
<ref name="KF">{{cite news |first=Killian |last=Fox |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/sep/03/orlando-figes-gorbachev-was-a-very-sharp-and-likable-person |title=Orlando Figes: 'Gorbachev was a very sharp and likable person' |newspaper=] |date=3 September 2022 |access-date=6 September 2022 |type=interview }}</ref> | |||
* 2008 – Samuel Johnson Prize<ref></ref> ''The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia'' | |||
<ref name="OF">{{citation |title=Orlando Figes |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website) |access-date=22 May 2024 |url=http://www.orlandofiges.com/orlando.php}}</ref> | |||
* 2008 – Ondaatje Prize<ref>{{dead link|date=August 2011}}</ref> ''The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia'' | |||
<ref name="OF-UK">{{citation |title=Home |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website, UK domain) |access-date=22 May 2024 |url=http://www.orlandofiges.co.uk}}</ref> | |||
* 2009 – Prix Médicis<ref name="fluctuat1"/> ''Les Chuchoteurs: la vie et la mort sous Staline'' | |||
<ref name="RH11">{{cite web |url=http://www.brill.com/russian-history |title=Russian History |publisher=] |access-date=31 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006121449/http://www.brill.com/russian-history |archive-date=6 October 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
* 2010 – Premio Roma<ref name=autogenerated2 /> "Sospetto e Silenzio" | |||
<ref name="RH24">{{citation |title=Russian History: Editorial Board |publisher=] |access-date=22 May 2024 |url=https://brill.com/view/journals/ruhi/ruhi-overview.xml?contents=editorialcontent-84250}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
==Works== | |||
* ''Peasant Russia, Civil War: The Volga Countryside in Revolution, 1917-21'', 1989, ISBN 0-19-822169-X | |||
* ''A People's Tragedy: Russian Revolution 1891-1924'', London: Jonathan Cape, 1996, ISBN 0-7126-7327-X | |||
* With Boris Kolonitskii: ''Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917'', 1999, ISBN 0-300-08106-5 | |||
* ''Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia'', 2002, ISBN 0-14-029796-0 | |||
* ''The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia'', 2007, ISBN 978-0-8050-7461-1, ISBN 0-8050-7461-9, ISBN 978-0-8050-7461-1, ISBN 0-8050-7461-9 | |||
* ''Crimea: The Last Crusade'', Allen Lane, 2010. ISBN 978-0-7139-9704-0 | |||
* ''Just Send Me Word: A True Story of Love and Survival in the Gulag'', Metropolitan Books, 2012. ISBN 978-0-8050-9522-7 | |||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
*{{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com |title=Orlando Figes [Home] |publisher= |
* {{cite web|url=http://www.orlandofiges.com |title=Orlando Figes [Home] |publisher=Orlando Figes (personal website) |access-date=31 August 2011}} | ||
*{{cite news| |
* {{cite news|last=Dammann |first=Guy |url=http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/history/story/0,,2290790,00.html |title=Interview: Guy Dammann talks to Orlando Figes|newspaper=The Guardian |date=14 July 2008 |access-date=31 August 2011}} | ||
* {{citation |last=Snowman |first=Daniel |author-link=Daniel Snowman |chapter=Orlando Figes |title=Historians |location=Basingstoke |publisher=] |date=2007 |pages=198–207 |isbn=978-1-349-54191-1 |doi=10.1007/978-0-230-59997-0_19|doi-broken-date=1 November 2024 }} | |||
*{{cite news|author=Luke Harding in Moscow |url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/dec/07/russian-police-seize-archive-repression |title=Russian police raid human rights group's archive ||publisher=''The Observer'' |date= 2008-12-07|accessdate=2011-08-31 |location=London}} | |||
*{{cite web|url=http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2008/12/08/an-open-letter-to-president-medvedev |title=Blog Archive » An open letter to President Medvedev |publisher=Index on Censorship |date=2008-12-08 |accessdate=2011-08-31}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{External links|date=July 2015}} | |||
*, September 2007 | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
*, September 2011 | |||
* , May 2014 | |||
*, May 2003 | |||
* , September 2007 | |||
* | |||
*, 2011 | * , September 2011 | ||
* {{IMDb name|276540}} | |||
*, ''The Economist'', October 2007 | |||
* , May 2003 | |||
*, ''New York Times'', November 2007 | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305031943/https://www.pbs.org/greatwar/historian/hist_figes_05_hope.html |date=5 March 2016 }} | |||
*, December 2007 | |||
* , 2012 | |||
*, ''Washington Post'', February 2008 | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141021015436/https://foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/06/20/dont_go_there |date=21 October 2014 }}, 2011 | |||
* speaking at the Samuel Johnson short-listed author event about "Whisperers", London (2008) BookBuffet.com | |||
* , '']'', October 2007 | |||
*, April 2009 | |||
* |
* , ''New York Times'', November 2007 | ||
* , December 2007 | |||
* , ''Washington Post'', February 2008 | |||
* speaking at the Samuel Johnson short-listed author event about "Whisperers", London (2008) BookBuffet.com | |||
* , April 2009 | |||
* from '']'' | |||
{{Wolfson History Prize Winners}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{Authority control|VIAF=92926708}} | |||
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. --> | |||
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| DATE OF BIRTH = 20 November 1959 | |||
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| DATE OF DEATH = | |||
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}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:31, 12 December 2024
British historian (born 1959)
Orlando Figes | |
---|---|
Figes in 2023 | |
Born | Orlando Guy Figes (1959-11-20) 20 November 1959 (age 65) London, England |
Citizenship |
|
Spouse |
Stephanie Palmer (m. 1990) |
Children | 2 |
Academic background | |
Education | |
Thesis | The Political Transformation of Peasant Russia: Peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917–1920 (1987) |
Doctoral advisor | Norman Stone |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Historian |
Institutions |
|
Notable students | |
Main interests | |
Notable works | A People's Tragedy (1996) |
Website | www |
Orlando Guy Figes (/ɔːˈlændəʊ ɡaɪ ˈfaɪdʒiːz/; born 20 November 1959) is a British and German historian and writer. He was a professor of history at Birkbeck College, University of London, where he was made Emeritus Professor on his retirement in 2022.
Figes is known for his works on Russian history, such as A People's Tragedy (1996), Natasha's Dance (2002), The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia (2007), Crimea (2010) and Just Send Me Word (2012). A People's Tragedy is a study of the Russian Revolution, and combines social and political history with biographical details in a historical narrative. Figes has also contributed on European history more broadly with his book The Europeans (2019).
Biography
Family background and education
Born in Islington, London, on 20 November 1959, Figes is the son of John George Figes and the feminist writer Eva Figes, whose Jewish family fled Nazi Germany in 1939. The author and editor Kate Figes was his elder sister. His father left the family when he was three.
He attended William Ellis School in north London (1971–78) and studied History at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where his teachers were Peter Burke and Norman Stone, graduating with a double-starred first in 1982. He wrote his undergraduate dissertation under Stone's guidance (with help from Isaiah Berlin) on 'Ludwig Börne and the Formation of a Radical Critique of Judaism' and published it as a journal article in the Leo Baeck Institute Year Book in 1984. He completed his PhD on 'The political transformation of peasant Russia: peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917–1920' under Norman Stone's supervision at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1987. It was his supervisor who suggested the shift of topic from German-Jewish philosophy to Russian peasant history. He also claimed to have taken inspiration from the work of Teodor Shanin for his thesis, and received Shanin's recommendation to study with Viktor Danilov [ru] in Moscow. Danilov helped him get "unprecedented" access to the Soviet archives.
Academic career
Figes was a Fellow of Trinity College from 1984 to 1999. He was appointed University Lecturer at the Faculty of History, University of Cambridge in 1987. His students at Cambridge included the historians Andrew Roberts and Tristram Hunt, the food writer Bee Wilson, the journalist James Harding, and the film producer Tanya Seghatchian.
He succeeded Richard J. Evans as Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London in 1999. He announced his retirement from the post in 2022.
He has served on the editorial board of the journal Russian History since at least 2011, writes for the international press, broadcasts on television and radio, reviews for The New York Review of Books, and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
During his career, he was involved in an international summer school for history teachers in Russian universities organised by the European University of St Petersburg.
Writing
Works on the Russian Revolution
Figes's first three books were on the Russian Revolution and the Civil War. Peasant Russia, Civil War (1989) was a detailed study of the peasantry in the Volga region during the Revolution and the Civil War (1917–21). Using village Soviet archives, Figes emphasised the autonomous nature of the agrarian revolution during 1917–18, showing how it developed according to traditional peasant notions of social justice independently of the Provisional Government, the Bolsheviks or other urban-based parties. He also demonstrated how the function of the rural soviets was transformed in the course of the Civil War as they were taken over by younger and more literate peasants and migrant townsmen, many of them veterans of the First World War or Red Army soldiers, who became the rural bureaucrats of the emerging Bolshevik regime.
A People's Tragedy (1996) is a panoramic history of the Revolution from 1891 to the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924. It combines social and political history and interweaves through the public narrative the personal stories of several representative figures, including Grigory Rasputin, the writer Maxim Gorky, Prince Georgy Lvov and General Alexei Brusilov, as well as unknown peasants and workers. Figes wrote that he had "tried to present the revolution not as a march of abstract social forces and ideologies but as a human event of complicated individual tragedies". Left-wing critics have represented Figes as a conservative because of his negative assessment of Lenin and his focus on the individual and "the random succession of chance events" rather than on the collective actions of the masses. Others have situated Figes among the so-called 'revisionist' historians of the Revolution who attempted to explain its political development in terms of social history. In 2008, The Times Literary Supplement listed A People's Tragedy as one of the "hundred most influential books since the war". In 2013 David Bowie named A People's Tragedy one of his 'top 100 books'.
Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917 (1999), co-written with Boris Kolonitskii [ru], analyses the political language, revolutionary songs, visual symbols and historical ideas that animated the revolutionary crowds of 1917.
Revolutionary Russia: 1891–1991 is a short introduction to the subject published as part of the relaunch of Pelican Books in the United Kingdom in 2014. In it Figes argues for the need to see the Russian Revolution in a longer time-frame than most historians have allowed. He states that his aim is 'to chart one hundred years of history as a single revolutionary cycle. In this telling the Revolution starts in the nineteenth century (and more specifically in 1891, when the public's reaction to the famine crisis set it for the first time on a collision course with the autocracy) and ends with the collapse of the Soviet regime in 1991.'
Natasha's Dance and Russian cultural history
Published in 2002, Natasha's Dance is a broad cultural history of Russia from the building of St. Petersburg during the reign of Peter the Great in the early eighteenth century. Taking its title from a scene in Tolstoy's War and Peace, where the young countess Natasha Rostova intuitively dances a peasant dance, it explores the tensions between the European and folk elements of Russian culture, and examines how the myth of the "Russian soul" and the idea of "Russianness" itself have been expressed by Russian writers, artists, composers and philosophers. It received positive reviews amongst British press.
Figes has also written essays on various Russian cultural figures, including Leo Tolstoy, Dmitri Shostakovich, Sergei Prokofiev and Andrei Platonov. In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, The Tsar's Last Picture Show, about the pioneering colour photographer in Tsarist Russia Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky.
The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia
Main article: The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's RussiaHis book The Whisperers Figes followed the approach of oral history. In partnership with the Memorial Society, a human rights non-profit organization, Figes gathered several hundred private family archives from homes across Russia and carried out more than a thousand interviews with survivors as well as perpetrators of the Stalinist repressions. The material is stored by Memorial in its Moscow, St Petersburg and Perm offices, and a selection of the documents and interviews is available on Figes's personal website.
Translated into more than twenty languages, The Whisperers was described by Andrey Kurkov as "one of the best literary monuments to the Soviet people" In it Figes underlined the importance of oral testimonies for the recovery of the history of repression in the former Soviet Union. While conceding that, "like all memory, the testimony given in an interview is unreliable", he said that oral testimony "can be cross-examined and tested against other evidence".
The Whisperers deals mainly with the impact of repression on private life. It examines the influence of the Soviet regime and its campaigns of terror on family relationships, emotions and beliefs, moral choices, issues of personal and social identity, and collective memory. According to Figes, 'the real power and lasting legacy of the Stalinist system were neither in structures of the state, nor in the cult of the leader, but, as the Russian historian Mikhail Gefter once remarked, "in the Stalinism that entered into all of us".'
The book includes a detailed study of the Soviet writer Konstantin Simonov, who became a leading figure in the Union of Soviet Writers and a propagandist in the "anti-cosmopolitan" campaign during Stalin's final years. Figes drew on the closed sections of Simonov's archive in the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art and on the archives of the poet's wife and son to produce his study of this major Soviet establishment figure.
On 4 December 2008, the St Petersburg offices of Memorial were raided by the police and the entire electronic archive, including the materials collected with Figes for The Whisperers, was confiscated by the authorities. Figes condemned the police raid, accusing the Russian authorities of trying to rehabilitate the Stalinist regime. He organised an open protest letter to President Dmitry Medvedev and other Russian leaders, which was signed by several hundred leading academics from across the world. After several court hearings, the materials were finally returned to Memorial in May 2009.
Figes saw his first Russian translation contract for The Whisperers cancelled in March 2009 by publisher Attikus [ru], who cited commercial reasons. Figes suggested that the book was "inconvenient" to Vladimir Putin's government and that the real explanation for the refusal to publish lay in "political pressure". A second translation project was abandoned by the publisher Corpus [ru] and the rights owner Dynasty Foundation in 2010 after one of Memorial's researchers reported that she found anachronisms, incorrect interpretations and factual errors in the book. Figes was notified of the decision in April 2011 in a letter which suggested that its publication would cause offence in Russia. Figes offered to revise the book, but his offer was ignored.
Just Send Me Word
Published in 2012, Just Send Me Word is a true story based on 1,246 letters smuggled in and out of the Pechora labour camp between 1946 and 1955 between Lev Mishchenko (a prisoner) and Svetlana Ivanova (his girlfriend in Moscow). There are 647 letters from Lev to Svetlana, and 599 from her to him. They form part of a family archive discovered by Memorial and delivered in three trunks to their Moscow offices in 2007. The letters are the largest known collection of private correspondence from the Gulag, according to Memorial.
Figes was given exclusive access to the letters and other parts of the archive, which is also based on interviews with the couple when they were in their nineties, and the archives of the labour camp itself. Figes raised the finance for the transcription of the letters, which are housed in Memorial's offices in Moscow and will become available to researchers in 2013. According to Figes, "Lev's letters are the only major real-time record of daily life in the Gulag that has ever come to light."
The book tells the story of Lev and Svetlana who met as students in the Physics Faculty of Moscow University in 1935. Separated by the Second World War in 1941, when Lev was enrolled in the Red Army, they made contact in 1946, when he wrote from Pechora. Figes uses the letters to explore conditions in the labour camp and to tell the love story, ending in 1955 with Lev's release and marriage to Svetlana. The book documents five illegal trips made by Svetlana to visit Lev by smuggling herself into the labour camp.
Writing in the Financial Times, Simon Sebag Montefiore called Just Send Me Word "a unique contribution to Gulag scholarship as well as a study of the universal power of love". Several reviewers highlighted the book's literary qualities, pointing out that it 'reads like a novel'
Crimea
Crimea: The Last Crusade is a panoramic history of the Crimean War of 1853–56. Drawing extensively from Russian, French and Ottoman as well as British archives, it combines military, diplomatic, political and cultural history, examining how the war left a lasting mark on the national consciousness of Britain, France, Russia and Turkey. Figes sets the war in the context of the Eastern Question, the diplomatic and political problems caused by the decay of the Ottoman Empire. In particular, he emphasises the importance of the religious struggle between Russia as the defender of the Orthodox and France as the protector of the Catholics in the Ottoman Empire. He frames the war within a longer history of religious conflict between Christians and Muslims in the Balkans, southern Russia and the Caucasus that continues to this day. Figes stresses the religious motive of the Tsar Nicholas I in his bold decision to go to war, arguing that Nicholas was swayed by the ideas of the Pan-Slavs to invade Moldavia and Wallachia and encourage Slav revolts against the Ottomans, despite his earlier adherence to the Legitimist principles of the Holy Alliance. He also shows how France and Britain were drawn into the war by popular ideas of Russophobia that swept across Europe in the wake of the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848. As one reviewer wrote, Figes shows "how the cold war of the Soviet era froze over fundamental fault lines that had opened up in the 19th century."
The Europeans
The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture is a panoramic history of nineteenth-century European culture told through the biographies of Pauline Viardot, the opera singer, composer and salon hostess, her husband Louis Viardot, an art expert and theatre manager, and the Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, who had a long love affair with Pauline Viardot and lived with the couple in a ménage à trois for over twenty years. They lived at various times in Paris, Baden-Baden, London, Courtavenel and Bougival.
Figes argues that the pan-European culture formed through new technologies (especially the railways and lithographic printing), mass foreign travel, market forces, and the development of international copyright, enabling writers, artists and composers as well as their publishers to enter foreign markets through the growth of literary translations, touring companies and international publishing. In the continent as a whole, the arts thus became "a unifying force between nations" leading to the emergence of a modern European 'canon' so that, by 1900, "the same books were being read across the Continent, the same paintings reproduced, the same music played at home or heard in concert halls, and the same operas performed in all the major theatres of Europe".
The Europeans was published in the United Kingdom in September 2019 and received positive reviews by William Boyd and Rupert Christiansen.
The Story of Russia
Figes published The Story of Russia in September 2022. The book is a general history of Russia from the earliest times to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It focuses on the ideas and myths that have structured the Russians' understanding of their history, and explores what Figes calls the "structural continuities" of Russian history, such as the sacralisation of power and patrimonial autocracy. The Guardian described it as "An indispensable survey of more than 1,000 years of history shows how myth and fact mix dangerously in the tales this crucial country tells about itself" A reviewer in The Spectator called it "a saga of multi-millennial identity politics"; Figes argues that no other country has so often changed its origin story, its "istories continuously reconfigured and repurposed to suit its present needs and reimagine its future".
Plays
In 2023 Figes's debut play, The Oyster Problem, was produced by the Jermyn Street Theatre in London. The play is about the financial crisis of the writer Gustave Flaubert in the last years of his life and the attempts of his literary friends, George Sand, Emile Zola and Ivan Turgenev, to find him a sinecure. Bob Barrett played the part of Flaubert and Philip Wilson directed. Everything Theatre described The Oyster Problem as "a remarkable pearl of a play; a patchwork of anecdotes that welcomes us into the private life of Gustave Flaubert and his literary contemporaries"
Film and television work
Figes has contributed frequently to radio and television broadcasts in the United Kingdom and around the world. In 1999 he wrote a six-part educational TV series on the history of Communism under the title Red Chapters. Produced by Opus Television and broadcast in the UK, the 25-minute films featured turning-points in the history of Soviet Russia, China, and Cuba. In 2003 he wrote and presented a TV feature documentary for the BBC, The Tsar's Last Picture Show, about the pioneering colour photographer in Russia Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky. In 2007 he wrote and presented two 60-minute Archive Hour programmes on radio entitled Stalin's Silent People which used recordings from his oral history project with Memorial that formed the basis of his book The Whisperers. The programmes are available on Figes's website.
Figes was the historical consultant on the film Anna Karenina (2012), directed by Joe Wright, starring Keira Knightley and Jude Law with a screenplay by Tom Stoppard. He was also credited as the historical consultant on the 2016 BBC War & Peace television series directed by Tom Harper with a screenplay by Andrew Davies. Interviewed by the Sunday Telegraph, Figes defended the series against criticism that it was "too Jane Austen" and "too English".
Theatrical adaptations
Figes's The Whisperers was adapted and performed by Rupert Wickham as a one-man play, Stalin's Favourite. Based on Figes's portrayal of the writer Konstantin Simonov, the play was performed in London at the National Theatre in November 2011 and at the Unicorn Theatre in January 2012.
Sanctions by Russian government
Figes has been critical of the Vladimir Putin government, in particular alleging that Putin has attempted to rehabilitate Joseph Stalin and impose his own agenda on history-teaching in Russian schools and universities. He condemned the arrest by the FSB of historian Mikhail Suprun as part of a "Putinite campaign against freedom of historical research and expression".
In December 2013, Figes wrote a long piece in the US journal Foreign Affairs on the Euromaidan demonstrations in Kyiv suggesting that a referendum on Ukraine's foreign policy and the country's possible partition might be a preferable alternative to the possibility of civil war and military intervention by Russia. In June 2023, he said that Russia "needs to be completely defeated" in the Russo-Ukrainian War, "not just for Ukraine's sake, but for Russia's sake".
In February 2024, Figes was sanctioned with denial of entry into Russia by Vladimir Putin's government, together with other British academics and experts, for criticizing the war in Ukraine and allegedly demonizing Russia.
Amazon reviews controversy
In 2010, Figes posted several pseudonymous reviews under the moniker "orlando-birkbeck" on the UK site of the online bookseller Amazon. The reviews criticised works by two other British historians of Russia, Robert Service and Rachel Polonsky, but praised other books, including one of his own. After initially denying that he wrote these reviews, Figes took full responsibility for them, apologized and agreed to pay for legal costs and damages to Polonsky and Service who launched a lawsuit against Figes.
Views
In an interview with Andrew Marr in 1997, Figes described himself as "a Labour Party supporter and 'a bit of a Tony Blair man', though he confessed, when it came to the Russian revolution, to being mildly pro-Menshevik."
In 2018, when asked to comment on the popularity of Marxism among the student supporters of Jeremy Corbyn, he expressed concern that British university textbooks were drawing a "moral equivalence" between the economic achievements of the Soviet Union and the "murder and destruction" of Stalinism.
Personal life
In 1990, Figes married Stephanie Palmer, a senior lecturer in law at Cambridge University and barrister at Blackstone Chambers. They have two daughters. He divides his time between his homes in London and Umbria in Italy. On 13 February 2017, Figes become a German citizen.
Prizes and honours
- 1997 – Wolfson History Prize A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924
- 1997 – WH Smith Literary Award A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924
- 1997 – NCR Book Award A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924
- 1997 – Longman-History Today Book Prize A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924
- 1997 – Los Angeles Times Book Prize A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924
- 2009 – Przeglad Wschodni Award Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia.
- 2021 – Antonio Delgado Prize (Spain), The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture
In 2023, Figes was awarded an honorary degree by the Menéndez Pelayo International University in Santander, Spain.
Works
- Peasant Russia, Civil War: The Volga Countryside in Revolution, 1917–21, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989, ISBN 0-19-822169-X
- A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924, London: Jonathan Cape, 1996, ISBN 0-7126-7327-X
- with Boris Kolonitskii: Interpreting the Russian Revolution: The Language and Symbols of 1917, 1999, ISBN 0-300-08106-5
- Natasha's Dance: A Cultural History of Russia, 2002, ISBN 0-14-029796-0
- The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia, 2007, ISBN 978-0-8050-7461-1, ISBN 0-8050-7461-9, ISBN 978-0-8050-7461-1, ISBN 0-8050-7461-9
- Crimea: The Last Crusade, Allen Lane, 2010. ISBN 978-0-7139-9704-0
- Just Send Me Word: A True Story of Love and Survival in the Gulag, Metropolitan Books, 2012. ISBN 978-0-8050-9522-7
- Revolutionary Russia, 1891–1991, Metropolitan Books, 2014, ISBN 9780805091311
- Revolutionary Russia, 1891–1991, Pelican Books, 2014, ISBN 978-0141043678
- The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture, New York: Henry Holt and Co. 2019, ISBN 9781627792141
- The Story of Russia, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022, ISBN 978-1526631749
References
- ^ "Figes, Prof. Orlando Guy". Who's Who. A & C Black. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U15719. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Tucker, Eva (7 September 2012). "Eva Figes obituary". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
- Anderson, Hephzibah (26 December 2019). "Kate Figes, Feminist Author on Family Life, Dies at 62". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- ^ Home, Orlando Figes (personal website, UK domain), retrieved 22 May 2024
- ^ Snowman 2007, p. 200.
- The political transformation of peasant Russia: peasant Soviets in the Middle Volga, 1917-1920, Orlando Guy Figes, Cambridge University Library, retrieved 22 May 2024
- ^ Snowman 2007, p. 198.
- Orlando Figes, Orlando Figes (personal website), retrieved 22 May 2024
- ^ Fox, Killian (3 September 2022). "Orlando Figes: 'Gorbachev was a very sharp and likable person'". The Guardian (interview). Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- "Russian History". Brill Publishers. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- Russian History: Editorial Board, Brill, retrieved 22 May 2024
- "Current RSL Fellows". Royal Society of Literature. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
- Figes, Orlando, Peasant Russia, Civil War, p. xxi.
- Figes, Orlando, A People's Tragedy, 1996, p. xvii.
- Haynes, Michael, and Wolfreys, Jim, History and Revolution, London: Verso, 2007, p. 15.
- Keep, John, "Great October?" in The Times Literary Supplement, 23 August 1996, p. 5.
- Times Literary Supplement, 30 December 2008.
- Bury, Liz (1 October 2013). "David Bowie's top 100 must-read books". Theguardian.com. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
- Journal of Cold War Studies, Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 2000, pp. 122–25.
- "Pelican Books". Pelican Books. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Figes, Orlando (8 April 2014). Revolutionary Russia, 1891-1991: A History: Orlando Figes: 9780805091311: Amazon.com: Books. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0805091311.
- "Books of the moment: What the papers say". The Daily Telegraph. 12 October 2002. p. 60. Retrieved 19 July 2024.
- "Orlando Figes | The New York Review of Books". Nybooks.com. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- ^ "Four Documentaries – The Tsar's Last Picture Show". BBC. 22 November 2007. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- ^ Robert Booth; Miriam Elder (23 May 2012). "Orlando Figes translation scrapped in Russia amid claims of inaccuracies". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 30 August 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
- Figes, Orlando, The Whisperers, Orlando Figes (personal website), archived from the original on 13 March 2011
- Figes, Orlando, Archives, Orlando Figes (personal website), archived from the original on 4 October 2023
- Figes, Orlando, Interviews, Orlando Figes (personal website), archived from the original on 4 December 2023
- His books have been translated into French, German, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish, Russian, Czech, Slovak, Polish, Estonian, Latvian, Slovenian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Greek, Turkish, Hebrew, Georgian, Korean, Japanese and Chinese. "Orlando Figes [Author and Professor of Russian History]". Orlandofiges.com. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
- Schaaf, Matthew. "Secrets of the state". New Statesman. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- The Whisperers (London, 2007), p. 636.
- Figes, The Whisperers, p. xxxii.
- Times Literary Supplement, 8 February 2008.
- Harding, Luke (7 December 2008). "British scholar rails at police seizure of anti-Stalin archive". The Guardian. The Observer. Archived from the original on 5 September 2013.
- Figes, Orlando (8 December 2008). "Blog Archive – An open letter to President Medvedev". Index on Censorship.
- Figes, Orlando (4 March 2009), What's The Real Reason My Book on Stalin Isn't Being Published in Russia?, RFE/RL, archived from the original on 17 February 2018
- ^ Reddaway, Peter; Cohen, Stephen F. (23 May 2012), Orlando Figes and Stalin's Victims, The Nation, archived from the original on 5 September 2015
- The title of the book is taken from the poem "In Dream" by Anna Akhmatova, translated by D.M. Thomas: "Black and enduring separation/I share equally with you/Why weep? Give me your hand/Promise to appear in a dream again./You and I are like two mountains/And in this world we cannot meet./Just send me word/At midnight sometime through the stars."
- Scammell, Michael. "Love Against All Odds". The New York Review of Books. Nybooks.com. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- "A Note From Memorial" in Just Send Me Word, p. 297.
- Figes, Orlando (July–August 2011). "Don't Go There: Chasing the dying memories of Soviet trauma". Foreign Policy. Archived from the original on 4 July 2011.
- Simon Sebag Montefiore (26 May 2012). "Labour of love". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Timothy Phillips (25 May 2012). "Staying alive with the language of love - Life Style Books - Life & Style - London Evening Standard". The Standard. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- "A Page in the Life: Orlando Figes". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Angus Macqueen (10 October 2010). "Crimea: The Last Crusade by Orlando Figes – review". The Observer. London. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- Figes, Orlando (2019). The Europeans: Three Lives and the Making of a Cosmopolitan Culture. London: Allen Lane. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0241004890.
- Dinning, Rachel (30 September 2019). "Orlando Figes on the transformation of Europe". BBC History Extra. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
- Boyd, William (7 September 2019). "The Europeans by Orlando Figes review – the importance of a shared culture". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
- Christiansen, Rupert (15 September 2019). "A ménage a trois that transformed European culture". The Sunday Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235.
- Kendall, Bridget (September 2022). "The Story of Russia by Orlando Figes review – what Putin sees in the past". The Guardian.
- Wheeler, Sara (3 September 2022). "How Putin manipulated history to help Russians feel good again". The Spectator (review). Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- Quotation from the introduction. Kendall, Bridget (1 September 2022). "The Story of Russia by Orlando Figes review – what Putin sees in the past". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- Gillinson, Miriam (15 February 2023). "The Oyster Problem review – the struggle to save Flaubert from himself". The Guardian.
- "Review: The Oyster Problem, Jermyn Street Theatre". 18 February 2023.
- "Red Chapters: Turning Points in the History of Communism (TV Series 1999)". IMDb.com. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- ^ "Orlando Figes [Author and Professor of Russian History]". Orlandofiges.com. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- "Anna Karenina cast". IMDb.com. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Stanford, Peter (8 October 2017). "Those who complained about War and Peace are 'whingers', says historical advisor Orlando Figes". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
- "National Theatre announce new Season to Jan 2012". London Theatre. 8 June 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- "Past Productions, 2012". Unicorn Theatre. 21 November 2012. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- Figes, Orlando (29 November 2007). "Vlad the Great". New Statesman.
- Luke Harding (15 October 2009). "Russian historian arrested in clampdown on Stalin era". The Guardian.
- Figes, Orlando (16 December 2013). "Is There One Ukraine?". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- "'We Want To Defeat Russia,' Says British Historian Figes, 'But We Don't Want To Push It Into Civil War And Chaos'". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 13 June 2023.
- "Russia slaps sanctions on British officials, historians and academics". Reuters. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
- Foreign Ministry statement on personal sanctions on members of the UK military and political establishment as well as scientific and academic community, The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, 12 February 2024, archived from the original on 4 June 2024
- Topping, Alexandra (16 July 2010), "Historian Orlando Figes agrees to pay damages for fake reviews", The Guardian, archived from the original on 18 February 2021
- Orlando Figes to pay fake Amazon review damages, BBC, 17 July 2010, archived from the original on 8 March 2021
- Appleyard, Bryan (3 October 2010), "O the Wild Charges He Made", The Sunday Times, retrieved 5 March 2020
- ^ "Makers of their own tragedy". The Independent. 23 October 2011. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022.
- Cancian, Dan (18 January 2018), "British universities accused of 'luring' millennials towards communism", International Business Times, archived from the original on 21 October 2020
- "Orlando Figes". Amazon UK.
- Coman, Julian (30 September 2019). "The Europeans by Orlando Figes review – a very continental menage a trois". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
- "Orlando Figes gana el Premio Antonio Delgado a la Divulgación de la Propiedad Intelectual". Sgae.es. 3 December 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
- "Orlando Figes investido doctor honoris causa por la UIMP: 'Nos hemos equivocado con Rusia durante mucho tiempo'". www.uimp.es (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 28 August 2023. Retrieved 16 September 2023.
Sources
- "Orlando Figes [Home]". Orlando Figes (personal website). Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- Dammann, Guy (14 July 2008). "Interview: Guy Dammann talks to Orlando Figes". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- Snowman, Daniel (2007), "Orlando Figes", Historians, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 198–207, doi:10.1007/978-0-230-59997-0_19 (inactive 1 November 2024), ISBN 978-1-349-54191-1
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: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
External links
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- Figes's free educational website on the Russian Revolution and Soviet history, May 2014
- Figes's website with oral history materials, September 2007
- new Figes website, September 2011
- Orlando Figes at IMDb
- BBC Four presenter interview, May 2003
- PBS filmed interviews with Figes Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- Video presentation by Figes of Just Send Me Word, 2012
- Figes on 20 years since the fall of Communism Archived 21 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 2011
- Stalin's children, The Economist, October 2007
- Sunday Book Review, New York Times, November 2007
- NPR Interview, December 2007
- The Destruction of Memory, Washington Post, February 2008
- Podcast of Figes speaking at the Samuel Johnson short-listed author event about "Whisperers", London (2008) BookBuffet.com
- Podcast of Figes 'On the Politics of Russian History', April 2009
- Figes author page and article archive from The New York Review of Books
- English people of German-Jewish descent
- People from Islington (district)
- People educated at William Ellis School
- Academics of Birkbeck, University of London
- Alumni of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Historians of communism
- English historians
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Historians of Russia
- Naturalized citizens of Germany
- Living people
- Wolfson History Prize winners