Fr. 51.50

Criminal Subculture in the Gulag - Prisoner Society in the Stalinist Labour Camps

Inglese · Tascabile

In fase di riedizione, attualmente non disponibile

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

Sommario

List of Illustrations
Introduction
1. Etap (Transportation)
2. Socialisation
3. Communication
4. Enactment
5. Punishment
6. Conflict
Conclusion: Criminal Subculture after the Gulag
Bibliography
Index

Info autore

Mark Vincent is an independent scholar who obtained his PhD in 2015 from the Univeristy of East Anglia, UK.

Riassunto

Despite growing academic interest in the Gulag, our knowledge of the camps as a lived experience remains relatively incomplete. Criminal Subculture in the Gulag, in its sophisticated analysis of crime, punishment and everyday life in Soviet labour camps, rectifies this.

From Gulag journals and song collections to tattoo drawings and dictionaries of slang, Mark Vincent draws on often-overlooked archival material from the Moscow Criminological Bureau to reconstruct a fuller picture of Gulag daily life and society. In thematic chapters, Vincent maps the Gulag ‘penal arc’ of prisoners across initiation tests, means of communication, the importance of card playing, punishment rituals and the notorious 1948-52 cyka (‘bitches’) internal prison war between military veterans and vory-v-zakone. Most importantly, this timely examination of crime and punishment in modern Russia also highlights the lines of continuity between the Gulag systems, late Imperial Katorga,and today’s Russian mafia.

As such, this impressively interdisciplinary volume is important reading for all scholars of 20th-century Russia as well as those interested in international criminality and penology.

Prefazione

A detailed examination of everyday life, crime and punishment in the Soviet Gulag.

Testo aggiuntivo

The Gulag was a horror not just for its incarceration of innocents. Mark Vincent creatively uses available but previously untapped sources to draw a captivating portrait of the experiences and unique culture that developed amid the brutal conditions behind barbed wire among the least understood victims of the Gulag—its criminals.

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