Synopses & Reviews
MY DISILLUSIONMENT IN RUSSIA BY EMMA GOLDMAN GARDEN CITY HEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE COMPANY 1923 BINDERY APRibl949 COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES AT THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N Y First Edition PREFACE THE decision to record my experiences, observations, and reactions during my stay in Russia I had made long before I thought of leaving that country. In fact, that was my main reason for departing from that tragically heroic land. The strongest of us are loath to give up a long cherished dream. I had come to Russia possessed by the hope that I should find a new-born country, with its people wholly consecrated to the great, though very difficult, task of revolu tionary reconstruction. And I had fervently hoped that I might become an active part of the inspiring work. I found reality in Russia grotesque, totally unlike the great ideal that had borne me upon the crest of high hope to the land of promise. It re quired fifteen long months before I could get my bearings. Each day, each week, each month added new links to the fatal chain that pulled down my cherished edifice. I fought desper ately against the disillusionment. For a long vi PREFACE time I strove against the still voice within me which urged me to face the overpowering facts. I would not and could not give up Then came Kronstadt. It was the final wrench. It completed the terrible realization that the Russian Revolution was no more. I saw before me the Bolshevik State, formid able, crushing every constructive revolutionary effort, suppressing, debasing, and disintegratingeverything. Unable and unwilling to become a cog in that sinister machine, and aware that I could be of no practical use to Russia and her people, I decided to leave the country. Once out of it, I would relate honestly, frankly, and as objectively as humanly possible to me the story of my two years 1 stay in Russia. I left in December, 1921. I could have written then, fresh under the influence of the ghastly experience. But I waited four months before I could bring myself to write a series of articles. I delayed another four months before beginning the present volume. I do not pretend to write a history. Removed by fifty or a hundred years from the events he is describing, the historian may seem to be objec tive. But real history is not a compilation of mere data. It is valueless without the human PREFACE vii element which the historian necessarily gets from the writings of the contemporaries of the events in question. It is the personal reactions of the participants and observers which lend vitality to all history and make it vivid and alive. Thus, numerous histories have been written of the French Revolution yet there are only a very few that stand out true and convincing, illuminative in the degree in which the historian has felt his subject through the medium of human docu ments left by the contemporaries of the period. I myself and I believe, most students of his tory have felt and visualized the Great French Revolution much more vitally from the letters and diaries of contemporaries, such as Mme. Roland, Mirabeau, and other eye witnesses, than from the so-called objective historians. By a strange coincidence a volume of letters written during the French Revolution, and compiled bythe able German anarchist publicist, Gustav Landauer, came into my hands during the most critical period of my Russian experience. I was actually reading them while hearing the Bolshe vik artillery begin the bombardment of the Kronstadt rebels. Those letters gave me a most vivid insight into the events of the French Revolution. As never before they brought viii PREFACE home to me the realization that the Bolshevik regime in Russia was, on the whole, a significant replica of what had happened in France more than a century before...
Synopsis
This vintage book contains Emma Goldman's 1923 work, "My Disillusionment in Russia". In this volume, Goldman recounts some of her experiences in Russia after a trip to investigate personally what she believed to be the nearest approach to a utopia the world had ever seen. What she found was so disappointing, however, that she thought it her duty to set forth her experiences and conclusions in this book. Emma Goldman (1869 - 1940) was a seminal anarchist renowned for her political activism, writing, and oration. Many vintage texts such as this are increasingly scarce and expensive, and it is with this in mind that we are republishing this volume now, in an affordable, high-quality, modern edition. It comes complete with a specially commissioned biography of the author.