
Leningrad 1941-42
Morality in a City Under Siege
by Sergey Yarov
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Pub Date 16 Jun 2017 | Archive Date 8 Mar 2022
Description
‘When
most people in a great city were dying of hunger, some died faster than
others. Some lived by privilege, by crime, or by the goodness of
others. Some were empowered to decide which others would live or die.
What does this tell us about their morality and about our own rules of
ethical behaviour? Sergei Yarov’s study of wartime Leningrad is an
unblinking inquiry into the depths of the human spirit.’
Mark Harrison, Warwick University
‘St Petersburger Sergei Yarov was, until his cruelly premature death, one of Russia's leading historians, and in this spare, searing analysis of his home city's greatest disaster, he is at the height of his powers. Unlike conventional eulogies to siege heroism, Yarov's retrospective anthropology, drawing on hundreds of diaries and documents, shows us what he calls 'real people, irate, resentful, but still imbued with a sense of compassion'. Amid the horrors of disintegration and degradation, he testifies to how “Leningrad saved itself through redeeming actions great and small”. An intensely moving and unforgettable book.’
Catriona Kelly, University of Oxford
Mark Harrison, Warwick University
‘St Petersburger Sergei Yarov was, until his cruelly premature death, one of Russia's leading historians, and in this spare, searing analysis of his home city's greatest disaster, he is at the height of his powers. Unlike conventional eulogies to siege heroism, Yarov's retrospective anthropology, drawing on hundreds of diaries and documents, shows us what he calls 'real people, irate, resentful, but still imbued with a sense of compassion'. Amid the horrors of disintegration and degradation, he testifies to how “Leningrad saved itself through redeeming actions great and small”. An intensely moving and unforgettable book.’
Catriona Kelly, University of Oxford
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9781509507986 |
PRICE | £35.00 (GBP) |
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