DANIEL BEER is senior lecturer in the Department of History at Royal Holloway, University of London. He has written widely on nineteenth-century Russia and is the author of Renovating Russia: The Human Sciences and the Fate of Liberal Modernity, 1880-1930.
A visceral, hundred-year history of the vast Russian penal colony.
It was known as 'the vast prison without a roof.' From the beginning of the nineteenth century until the Russian Revolution, the tsars exiled more than one million prisoners and their families beyond the Ural Mountains to Siberia. Daniel Beer illuminates both the brutal realities of this inhuman system and the tragic and inspiring fates of those who endured it. Here are the vividly told stories of petty criminals and mass murderers, bookish radicals and violent terrorists, fugitives and bounty hunters, and the innocent women and children who followed their husbands and fathers into exile.
Siberia was intended to serve not only as a dumping ground for criminals but also as a colony. Just as exile would purge Russia of its villains so too would it purge villains of their vices. In theory, Russia’s most unruly criminals would be transformed into hardy frontiersmen and settlers. But in reality, the system peopled Siberia with an army of destitute and desperate vagabonds who visited a plague of crime on the indigenous population. Even the aim of securing law and order in the rest of the Empire met with disaster: Expecting Siberia also to provide the ultimate quarantine against rebellion, the tsars condemned generations of republicans, nationalists and socialists to oblivion thousands of kilometers from Moscow. Over the nineteenth century, however, these political exiles transformed Siberia's mines, settlements and penal forts into a virtual laboratory of revolution. Exile became the defining experience for the men and women who would one day rule the Soviet Union.
Unearthing a treasure trove of new archival evidence, this masterly and original work tells the epic story of Russia's struggle to govern its prison continent and Siberia's own decisive influence on the political forces of the modern world. In The House of the Dead, Daniel Beer brings to light a dark and gripping reality of mythic proportions.
本书从历史,从制度,从经济,从监狱的细节,从沙俄政权最后的结局,全方位多角度,说明了流放制度的非人性,残忍,注定失败,简直就是沙俄政权落后腐朽的集中体现。但是,读者们如果多思考一下,把目光镜头拉远一点,会发现上述观点,只是把许多读者先入为主的预设观点,用一...
評分坦白说我拿起这本书的时候没报什么期望,因为历史书很少有写得好的。我多次表达过历史不是单纯的叙述过去,而是要阐明原因。即便原因千奇百怪,但至少要自圆其说。 所以在看这本书的时候,我就没抱什么希望。加上它又是写俄罗斯的,市面上但凡能见到的跟俄罗斯有关的书,或多或...
評分16世纪末,俄国冒险家叶尔马克·季莫费耶维奇率领队伍翻过乌拉尔山,开始了俄国向西伯利亚的扩张,俄国人的层层推进是势不可挡的,到了17世纪中后期,几乎已经完全占领了西伯利亚。随着俄国的目光转向了东方,他们惊奇的发现无论是皮毛生意、贵金属开采,还是定居农业,西伯利...
評分原文来自澎湃新闻2018.12.10所发内容,稍有删改。 2018年度的“坎迪尔历史奖(Cundill History Prize)”讲座之后,笔者有幸与今年的演讲嘉宾、去年的大奖获得者丹尼尔·比尔(Daniel Beer)教授进一步交流。丹尼尔·比尔教授目前任教于英国伦敦大学皇家霍洛威学院历史系,研究...
評分Miserable...我都開始做噩夢夢到knout瞭…十二月黨、老陀和庫頁島那幾章印象很深。Epilogue的諷刺挺苦澀的,所以作者你可以寫一本續集Siberian Exile Under the Bolsheviks嗎?
评分Miserable...我都開始做噩夢夢到knout瞭…十二月黨、老陀和庫頁島那幾章印象很深。Epilogue的諷刺挺苦澀的,所以作者你可以寫一本續集Siberian Exile Under the Bolsheviks嗎?
评分Miserable...我都開始做噩夢夢到knout瞭…十二月黨、老陀和庫頁島那幾章印象很深。Epilogue的諷刺挺苦澀的,所以作者你可以寫一本續集Siberian Exile Under the Bolsheviks嗎?
评分Miserable...我都開始做噩夢夢到knout瞭…十二月黨、老陀和庫頁島那幾章印象很深。Epilogue的諷刺挺苦澀的,所以作者你可以寫一本續集Siberian Exile Under the Bolsheviks嗎?
评分Miserable...我都開始做噩夢夢到knout瞭…十二月黨、老陀和庫頁島那幾章印象很深。Epilogue的諷刺挺苦澀的,所以作者你可以寫一本續集Siberian Exile Under the Bolsheviks嗎?
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