Georgi Vladimov
Georgi Nikolayevich Vladimov | |
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Native name | Георгий Николаевич Владимов |
Born | Georgi Nikolayevich Volosevich February 19, 1931 Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Frankfurt, Germany |
Alma mater | Saint Petersburg State University |
Notable works | Faithful Ruslan |
Notable awards | Russian Booker Prize, Andrei Sakharov Prize for Writer's Civic Courage |
Georgi Nikolayevich Vladimov (Russian: Гео́ргий Никола́евич Влади́мов; real family name Volosevich, Russian: Волосевич; 19 February 1931, Kharkiv – 19 October 2003, Frankfurt) was a Russian dissident writer.
Contents
Biography
In 1977 he became the leader of the Moscow section of Amnesty International, forbidden in the USSR. In 1983, he emigrated to West Germany.[1]
Vladimov's most famous novel is Faithful Ruslan, the tale of a guard dog in a Soviet Gulag, told from the dog's perspective. It circulated in the Soviet Union as a samizdat publication, before being published in West Germany in 1975.
His novel The General and His Army, on General Chibisov (Kobrissov) and General Vlasov, was awarded the Russian Booker Prize in 1995 and the Sakharov Prize in 2000.
Works
- The Great Ore (Большая руда, 1961)
- Three Minutes of Silence (Три минуты молчания, 1969)
- Faithful Ruslan (Верный Руслан, 1975)
- The Sixth Soldier, 1981
- Pay No Attention, Maestro (Не обращайте внимания, маэстро, 1983)
- The General and His Army (Генерал и его армия, 1994)
References
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External links
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with short description
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- 1931 births
- 2003 deaths
- Writers from Kharkiv
- Saint Petersburg State University alumni
- Russian male novelists
- Soviet writers
- Soviet dissidents
- Russian Booker Prize winners
- 20th-century novelists
- People denaturalized by the Soviet Union
- Soviet emigrants to West Germany
- Amnesty International people
- 20th-century Russian male writers
- Russian writer stubs