Sakharov: A BiographyBrandeis University Press, 2002 - 465 pàgines “As a thinker, as a man of uncanny judgment and courage, [Andrei Sakharov] was the one figure in the drama of the Soviet collapse who was the equal of Jefferson, Adams, and the rest,” wrote David Remnick in The New Yorker. One of the greatest physicists of the twentieth century—the “father of the Soviet H-bomb”—Sakharov won even greater renown later in life as the leading dissident in the Soviet Union. His courageous and untiring activities in defense of human rights won him the Nobel Peace Prize, six years of exile in the closed city of Gorky, and finally, official restitution as a symbol of Gorbachev’s perestroika. Richard Lourie, who translated Sakharov’s memoirs, has now written the first full biography of this towering figure of the last century. Drawing on a wide range of sources—including previously secret KGB files, as well as Sakharov’s own correspondence—Lourie tells the story of a life intimately bound up with Soviet history. With the H-bomb, Sakharov made the Soviet Union a superpower; with his courage and moral conviction, he made it accountable to the world for its treatment of its citizens. His untimely death in December 1989 cut short a budding career as a politician, for at the end of his life, Sakharov had been elected to the Congress of People’s Deputies and was engaged in a campaign to reform the Soviet constitution. As a scientist, Sakharov not only helped change the world through the creation of thermonuclear weapons, he also engaged in theoretical research whose ultimate significance is yet to be determined. As a Russian, he has been ranked by his own people with Lenin and Stalin in terms of his influence on the country. As a human being, he set a standard for principled dissent and compassion acknowledged the world over. This intelligent, detailed biography does justice to all aspects of his multi-faceted achievements. |
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Academy Alexei already Altshuler American Anatoly Marchenko Andrei Sakharov Andrei Tverdokhlebov Andropov apartment arrest Ashkhabad atomic bomb Beria Brezhnev called camp Central Committee Chalidze colleagues Communist dacha daughter death December détente dissidents Dmitri Efrem Elena Bonner exile eyes father FIAN German glasnost Gorbachev Gorky Gulag harov hospital human rights hunger strike Ibid idea Installation intelligentsia Ivan Jews KGB Files Khariton Khrushchev Klava Kremlin Kurchatov later leader Lenin Leningrad letter live Liza Lusia Marchenko Medvedev Memoirs mezhdu Moscow mother never nuclear official party perestroika person physicist physics Politburo political prisoners problem Pushkin Pushkin Square Red Army revolution Roy Medvedev Russian Sakharov and Bonner samizdat scientific scientists secret Slavsky socialist Solzhenitsyn Soviet Union speak Stalin Tamm Tanya Tatiana thermonuclear thing tion took trial turned USSR weapons wife words wrote York Zeldovich
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