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Vyacheslav Polonsky

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Vyacheslav Polonsky in 1920

Vyacheslav Pavlovich Polonsky (June 23, 1886 – February 24, 1932) - the pen name of Vyacheslav Pavlovich Gusin[1] - was a Russian literary critic, journalist and historian who was active in the Soviet Union in the 1920s up to his death in 1932. He was particularly involved in a controversy over competing accounts of the life of Mikhail Bakunin.[citation needed]

An abbreviated version of his essay "Lenin's views of art and culture" was published by Max Eastman in his book Artists in Uniform: a Study of Literature and Bureaucratism published in 1934.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Mamadalievna, Ismanova Maluda (2020). "What Maked V. P. Gusin to Use Pseudonyms". JournalNX. 6 (7): 302–304. ISSN 2581-4230. Retrieved 6 December 2024.
  2. ^ United States Congress House Committee on Un-American Activities (1956). "Exhibit No. 30". The Communist Conspiracy: Strategy and Tactics of World Communism. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 166–172. Retrieved 6 December 2024.

General references

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