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113:(Miraculous Alloy, 1934) was still popular in the 1960s. At the beginning of 1937, however, Kirshon fell out of favour due to his close association with
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82:(RAPP) in Moscow. He was among the most radical literary functionaries of the day, and was one of the most relentless persecutors of
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in Moscow. He was posthumously rehabilitated in 1955 and his plays were performed again.
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for associating with an "enemy of the people" and criticizing decisions of the
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In August 1937 he was arrested along with other former RAPP leaders as
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in the
Caucasus into the family of a lawyer, Kirshon served in the
109:(Bread, 1931) "had but an ephemeral success." His later
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121:. At a public meeting he was relentlessly attacked by
105:(Rails are Humming, 1927) "caused a sensation," but
136:sympathizers, and the next year he was executed at
78:, and from 1925 was one of the secretaries of the
267:This article about a Russian writer or poet is a
196:Russian Theater: From the Empire to the Soviets
34:August 6] 1902 – July 28, 1938) was a
38:playwright, poet, publicist and screenwriter.
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210:The Penguin Companion to Literature: European
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117:, former head of RAPP and brother-in-law of
86:. His ideological fervor recommended him to
66:. As a young idealist, he was upset by the
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80:Russian Association of Proletarian Writers
338:Russian male dramatists and playwrights
224:Russian Literature Since the Revolution
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198:(New York: Collier, 1962), pp. 330-31.
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207:Avril Pyman in A.K. Thorlby (ed.),
333:Russian dramatists and playwrights
271:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by
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343:Soviet dramatists and playwrights
226:(Harvard University Press, 1982:
172:Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar
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358:Great Purge victims from Russia
1:
64:Sverdlov Communist University
28:Влади́мир Миха́йлович Киршо́н
20:Vladimir Mikhailovich Kirshon
174:(Random House, Inc., 2005:
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353:20th-century male writers
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213:(Penguin, 1969), p. 618.
62:, which sent him to the
58:and in 1920 joined the
30:) (August 19 [
363:Soviet rehabilitations
168:Simon Sebag Montefiore
368:Russian writer stubs
348:Soviet male writers
328:People from Nalchik
123:Vsevolod Vishnevsky
99:Konstantin Terekhin
68:New Economic Policy
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222:Edward J. Brown,
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16:Soviet playwright
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192:Mark Slonim
101:(1926) and
94:s editor."
74:and in the
54:during the
312:Categories
234:), p. 174.
182:), p. 134.
144:References
127:Politburo
42:Biography
52:Red Army
46:Born in
134:Trotsky
92:Pravda'
48:Nalchik
24:Russian
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36:Soviet
107:Khleb
269:stub
228:ISBN
176:ISBN
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