Titre | Lev Kamenev, historien d'Alexandre Herzen : un intellectuel entre deux rives | |
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Auteur | Korine Amacher | |
Revue | Revue des Etudes Slaves | |
Numéro | Vol. 83, no 1, 2012 Alexandre Herzen (1812-1870). Son époque, sa postérité | |
Rubrique / Thématique | Articles |
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Page | 185-206 | |
Résumé anglais |
Lev Kamenev, a Specialist of Aleksandr Herzen's Work : An Intellectual Between Two Shores
The name of the Bolshevik Lev Kamenev has never been associated with that of Aleksandr Herzen. However, since the prerevolutionary period, Kamenev shows a deep interest in Herzen's work. After the Revolution, and particularly in the 1930s when he was director of the Academia Press and of two academic institutes of literature, Kamenev edited numerous texts by Herzen and started up an ambitious programme of studies dedicated to Herzen. Nevertheless, after his death sentence in 1936, a great part of his work disappeared in special archives inaccessible to researchers, till his posthumous rehabilitation in 1988. These archives are now accessible to them. Their disappearance prevented Herzen specialists from having access to his work and notably pushed back for many years the re-editon of The Bell
by Herzen, one of Kamenev's most ambitious projects. Kamenev's death also put an end to the discussions over Herzen's legacy. Kamenev, who has been one of the most active promoters of Lenin's interpretation of Herzen, remained a man stamped with prerevolutionary non-Marxist cultural and intellectual traditions, which were not hidden by him, as would be the case later, particularly after the Second World War when the Marxist interpretation of Herzen was definitively imposed. Source : Éditeur (via Persée) |
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Article en ligne | https://www.persee.fr/doc/slave_0080-2557_2012_num_83_1_8176 |