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Theatre in the Solovki Prison Camp

Natalia Kuziakina Boris M. Meerovich

$273

Hardback

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Russian
Harwood-Academic Publishers
09 February 1996
"There were theatres in many Soviet concentration camps. What were they like? Can we regard them as an artistic phenomenon? Do they constitute a distinct unity? It has been difficult to answer these and many other questions concerning the term ""concentration camp theatre"" mainly because the KGB archives are still largely inaccessible and few are still alive of those who worked in the theatres of the ""world behind the barbed wire"". The most important theatre of this kind, serving as a model for others, was in the Solovki camp for political prisoners. This account provides precise dates and names of the theatre managers, directors and actors."

By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Harwood-Academic Publishers
Country of Publication:   Switzerland
Volume:   v.3.
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 189mm, 
Weight:   612g
ISBN:   9783718654390
ISBN 10:   3718654393
Pages:   212
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  A / AS level ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction to the Series; Preface; Part 1 Part One; Chapter 1 From monastery to concentration camp; Chapter 2 The Solovetsky Special Purpose Camp — SLON; Chapter 3 The special purpose press: The Solovetsky Islands and The New Solovki; Chapter 4 Profiles and masques; Part 2 Part Two; Chapter 5 The Theatre of the 1st DePart ment; Chapter 6 The smaller theatres — ‘Trash’ and the group of ‘Our Own’; Chapter 7 The end of the early Solovki; Chapter 8 At the crossroads; Chapter 9 The theatre at Kem; Part 3 Part Three; Chapter 10 The ‘court’ and ‘vulgar’ theatres of the White Sea-Baltic Canal; Chapter 11 Camp theatres and the Central Theatre of the White Sea-Baltic Canal; Chapter 12 The theatre of the late Solovki;

Natalia Kuziakina

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