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Robert Conquest

George Robert Acworth Conquest CMG OBE FBA FRSL (15 July 1917 – 3 August 2015) was a British-American historian, poet, and novelist.[1] He was briefly a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain but later wrote several books against Communism.

Robert Conquest

Conquest in 1987
BornGeorge Robert Acworth Conquest
(1917-07-15)15 July 1917
Great Malvern, Worcestershire, England
Died3 August 2015(2015-08-03) (aged 98)
Stanford, California, U.S.
OccupationHistorian, poet
NationalityBritish
CitizenshipAmerican
EducationWinchester College
Alma mater
Notable works
Notable awardsSee below
Spouse
  • Joan Watkins
    (m. 1942; div. 1948)
  • Tatiana Mihailova
    (m. 1948; div. 1962)
  • Caroleen MacFarlane
    (m. 1964; div. 1978)
  • Elizabeth Wingate
    (m. 1979)
Children3

A long-time research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, Conquest was most notable for his work on the Soviet Union. His books included The Great Terror: Stalin's Purges of the 1930s (1968); The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivisation and the Terror-Famine (1986); and Stalin: Breaker of Nations (1991). He was also the author of two novels and several collections of poetry.

Early life and education edit

Conquest was born in Great Malvern, Worcestershire,[1] to an American father, Robert Folger Wescott Conquest, and an English mother, Rosamund Alys Acworth.[2][3] His father served in an American Ambulance Field Service unit with the French Army in World War I, and was awarded the Croix de Guerre, with Silver Star in 1916.[4]

Conquest was educated at Winchester College, where he won an exhibition to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE) at Magdalen College, Oxford. He took a gap year, spending time at the University of Grenoble and in Bulgaria, and returning to Oxford in 1937, where he joined the Communist Party of Great Britain and the Carlton Club.[5] He was awarded an MA in PPE and a DLitt in history.[6]

Career edit

War years edit

In Lisbon on an American passport at the outbreak of the Second World War, Conquest returned to England.[7] As the Communist Party of Great Britain denounced the war in 1939 as imperialist and capitalist, Conquest broke with it and was commissioned into the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 20 April 1940, serving with the regiment until 1946.[8][5]

In 1943 he was posted to the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (later part of University College London) to study Bulgarian.[9] The following year he was posted to Bulgaria as a liaison officer to the Bulgarian forces fighting under Soviet command, attached to the Third Ukrainian Front, then to the Allied Control Commission. At the end of the war, he joined the Foreign Office, returning to the British Legation in Sofia where he remained as the press officer.[1] In 1948 he left Bulgaria when he was recalled to London under a minor diplomatic cloud after he had helped smuggle two Bulgarians out of the country.[9]

Information Research Department edit

In 1948 Conquest joined the Foreign Office's Information Research Department (IRD), a "propaganda counter-offensive" unit created by the Labour Attlee government[10] in order to "collect and summarize reliable information about Soviet and communist misdoings, to disseminate it to democratic journalists, politicians, and trade unionists, and to support, financially and otherwise, anticommunist publications."[11] The IRD was also engaged in manipulating public opinion.[12] Conquest was remembered there as a "brilliant, arrogant" figure who had 10 people reporting to him.[5] He continued to work at the Foreign Office until 1956, becoming increasingly involved in the intellectual counter-offensive against communism.[9]

In 1949 Conquest's assistant, Celia Kirwan (later Celia Goodman), approached George Orwell for information to help identify Soviet sympathisers. Orwell's list, discovered after her death in 2002, included Guardian and Observer journalists, as well as E. H. Carr and Charlie Chaplin.[13] Conquest, like Orwell, fell for the beautiful Celia Kirwan, who inspired him to write several poems.[9] One of his foreign office colleagues was Alan Maclean, brother of Donald Maclean, one of the Philby spy ring, who fled to Russia with Guy Burgess in 1951. When his brother defected, Alan resigned, then went to Macmillan and published a book of Conquest's poems.[5] At the Foreign Office, Conquest wrote several papers that sowed the seeds for his later work. One, on the Soviet means of obtaining confessions, was elaborated on in The Great Terror. Other papers were "Peaceful Co-existence in Soviet Propaganda and Theory", and "United Fronts – a Communist Tactic".[9] In 1950 Conquest served briefly as First Secretary in the British Delegation to the United Nations.[citation needed]

Writing edit

In 1956 Conquest left the Foreign Office and became a freelance writer and historian.[9] After he left, he says, the Information Research Department (IRD) suggested to him that he could combine some of the data he had gathered from Soviet publications into a book.[10] During the 1960s he edited eight volumes of work produced by the IRD, published in London by the Bodley Head as the Soviet Studies Series.[10] Many of his Foreign Office works were published this way.[9] In the United States, the material was republished as The Contemporary Soviet Union Series by Frederick Praeger, who had previously published several books on communism at the request of the CIA,[10] in addition to works by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Milovan Đilas, Howard Fast, and Charles Patrick Fitzgerald.[14]

In 1962–1963 Conquest was literary editor of The Spectator, but he resigned when he found the job interfering with his historical writing. His first books on the Soviet Union were Common Sense About Russia (1960), The Soviet Deportation of Nationalities (1960) and Power and Policy in the USSR (1961). His other early works on the Soviet Union included Courage of Genius: The Pasternak Affair (1961) and Russia After Khrushchev (1965).[9]

Historical works edit

The Great Terror (1968) edit

In 1968 Conquest published what became his best-known work, The Great Terror: Stalin's Purge of the Thirties, the first comprehensive research of the Great Purge, which took place in the Soviet Union between 1934 and 1939. Many reviewers at the time were not impressed by his way of writing about the Great Terror, which was in the tradition of "great men who make history".[12] The book was based mainly on information which had been made public, either officially or by individuals, during the so-called "Khrushchev Thaw" in the period 1956–64. It also drew on accounts by Russian and Ukrainian émigrés and exiles dating back to the 1930s, and on an analysis of official Soviet documents such as the Soviet census.[15]

The most important aspect of the book was that it widened the understanding of the purges beyond the previous narrow focus on the "Moscow trials" of disgraced Communist Party of the Soviet Union leaders such as Nikolai Bukharin and Grigory Zinoviev, who were executed shortly thereafter. The question of why these leaders had pleaded guilty and confessed to various crimes at the trials had become a topic of discussion for a number of western writers, and helped inspire anti-Communist tracts such as George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four and Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon.[16]

Conquest argued that the trials and executions of these former Communist leaders were a minor detail of the purges. By his estimates, Stalinist purges had led to the deaths of some 20 million people. He later stated that the total number of deaths could "hardly be lower than some thirteen to fifteen million."[17]

Conquest sharply criticized Western intellectuals such as Beatrice and Sidney Webb, George Bernard Shaw, Jean-Paul Sartre, Walter Duranty, Sir Bernard Pares, Harold Laski, D. N. Pritt, Theodore Dreiser, Bertolt Brecht, Owen Lattimore, and Romain Rolland, as well as American ambassador Joseph Davies, accusing them of being dupes of Stalin and apologists of his regime. Conquest cites various comments made by them where, he argues, they were denying, excusing, or justifying various aspects of the purges.[18]

After the opening up of the Soviet archives, detailed information was released that Conquest argued supported his conclusions. When Conquest's publisher asked him to expand and revise The Great Terror, Conquest is famously said to have suggested the new version of the book be titled I Told You So, You Fucking Fools. In fact, the mock title was jokingly proposed by Conquest's old friend, Sir Kingsley Amis. The new version was published in 1990 as The Great Terror: A Reassessment; ISBN 0-19-507132-8.[19] The American historian J. Arch Getty disagreed, writing in 1993 that the archives did not support Conquest's casualty figures.[20] In 1995, investigative journalist Paul Lashmar suggested that the reputation of prominent academics such as Robert Conquest was built upon work derived from material provided by the IRD.[21] According to Denis Healey The Great Terror was an important influence, "but one which confirmed people in their views rather than converted them".[5]

Many aspects of his book continue to be disputed by sovietologist historians and researchers on Russian and Soviet history, such as Stephen G. Wheatcroft, who insists that Conquest's victim totals for Stalinist repressions are too high, even in his reassessments.[22][23] In 2000, Michael Ignatieff, whose family had emigrated from Russia as a result of the Bolshevik Revolution, wrote "One of the few unalloyed pleasures of old age is living long enough to see yourself vindicated. Robert Conquest is currently enjoying this pleasure."[24] Conservative historian Paul Johnson, one of Thatcher's closest advisers, described Conquest as "our greatest living historian". And, in the phrase of Timothy Garton Ash, he was Solzhenytsin before Solzhenytsin.[5]

In 1996 Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm, who had been previously attacked by Conquest for his book Age of Extremes,[25] praised Conquest's The Great Terror "as a remarkable pioneer effort to assess the Stalin Terror". However he expressed the view that this work and others were now to be considered obsolete "simply because the archival sources are now available". As a result, he wrote, there was no need for "fragmentary sources" and "guesswork". "[W]hen better or more complete data are available, they must take the place of poor and incomplete ones."[26] In 2002 Conquest replied to his revisionist critics: "They're still talking absolute balls. In the academy, there remains a feeling of, "Don't let's be too rude to Stalin. He was a bad guy, yes, but the Americans were bad guys too, and so was the British Empire."[27]

The Harvest of Sorrow (1986) edit

In 1986 Conquest published The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivisation and the Terror-Famine, dealing with the collectivization of agriculture in Ukraine and elsewhere in the USSR, under Stalin's direction in 1929–31, and the resulting famine, in which millions of peasants died due to starvation, deportation to labor camps, and execution. In this book, Conquest supported the view that the famine was a planned act of genocide.[9] According to historians Stephen Wheatcroft and R. W. Davies, "Conquest holds that Stalin wanted the famine... and that the Ukrainian famine was deliberately inflicted for its own sake." Nevertheless, he wrote to them in a letter in 2003 that "Stalin purposely inflicted the 1933 famine? No. What I argue is that with resulting famine imminent, he could have prevented it, but put 'Soviet interest' other than feeding the starving first thus consciously abetting it."[28][29]

Stalin and the Kirov Murder (1989) edit

For the Trotskyists, Kirov's murder was the Stalinist equivalent of the Reichstag fire, deliberately started by the Nazis to justify the arrest of German Communists. The Trotskyist-Menshevik view became the dominant one among western historians, popularised in Robert Conquest's influential books.[30]

In The Great Terror, Conquest already undermined the official Soviet story of conspiracy and treason. Conquest placed the murder in 1934 of the Leningrad party boss, Sergei Kirov, one of Stalin's inner circle, as the key to the mechanism of terror.

He returned to this in Stalin and the Kirov Murder (1989), where he argued that Stalin not only sanctioned Kirov's assassination, but used it as a justification for the terror that culminated in 1937–38, though no evidence has been found to confirm Stalin's role in the murder.[13][31][32]

Poetry and literature edit

Poems edit

In addition to his scholarly work, Conquest was a well-regarded poet[33] whose poems have been published in various periodicals from 1937. In 1945 he was awarded the PEN Brazil Prize for his war poem "For the Death of a Poet" – about an army friend, the poet Drummond Allison, killed in Italy – and, in 1951, he received a Festival of Britain verse prize.[34] During his lifetime, he had seven volumes of poetry[35] and one of literary criticism[36] published.

Conquest was a major figure in a prominent British literary circle known as "The Movement" which also included Philip Larkin and Kingsley Amis. Movement poets, many of whom bristled at being so labeled, rejected the experiments of earlier practitioners such as Ezra Pound.[16]

He edited, in 1956 and 1962, the influential New Lines anthologies, introducing works by them, as well as Thom Gunn, Dennis Enright, and others, to a wider public.[37] He spent 1959–60 as visiting poet at the University of Buffalo. Several of his poems were published in The New Oxford Book of Light Verse (1978; compiled by Amis), under the pseudonyms "Stuart Howard-Jones", "Victor Gray" and "Ted Pauker".[citation needed]

It emerged from the pages of poet Philip Larkin's published letters that Conquest and Larkin shared an enthusiasm for pornography in the 1950s.[9] When Larkin was in Hull, Conquest sent him judicious selections of the latest pornography, and, when he came down to London, Conquest took him on shopping trips to the Soho porn shops.[13] On one occasion Conquest, in 1957, wrote a letter to Larkin purporting to come from the Vice Squad which had found the poet's name on a pornographic publisher's list. Larkin panicked and went to see his solicitor, convinced that he was going to lose his job as librarian at Hull University, before Conquest owned up.[9] The true story of the joke became in 2008, Mr Larkin's Awkward Day, a comedy radio play by Chris Harrald.[38]

Soon after his expulsion from the Soviet Union, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn met with Conquest, asking him to translate a 'little' poem of his into English verse. This was "Prussian Nights" – nearly two thousand lines in ballad metre – published in 1977.[39]

A new Collected Poems, edited by Elizabeth Conquest, was published in March 2020 by the Waywiser Press.[40]

Novels edit

Conquest had been a member of the British Interplanetary Society since the 1940s, and shared Amis's taste for science fiction. Starting from 1961, the two writers jointly edited Spectrum, five anthologies of new sci-fi writing.[13] Conquest also proposed to Amis a collaboration based on a draft comic novel that Conquest had completed. This was revised by Amis, then it appeared under both their names as The Egyptologists (1965).[13] The novel is about a secret Egyptological London society that is really a husbands' organization serving as an alibi for philanderers.[16][41] A reviewer in The New York Times felt that their "elaborate little jokes leave an unpleasant taste".[13]

Later a film version of the novel was cancelled when its star, Peter Sellers, was called away to Hollywood.[42] Conquest published a science-fiction novel, A World of Difference (1955).[1]

Political works edit

What to Do When the Russians Come (1984) edit

In 1984, Robert Conquest wrote, with Jon Manchip White, the fictional book What to Do When the Russians Come: a Survivor's Guide which, however, was intended to be a real survival manual in case of Soviet invasion. This book, as many other works of the mid-1980s in different media, like Sir John Hackett's The Third World War, the movie Red Dawn, and the Milton Bradley game Fortress America, starts from the premise that a Soviet ground-invasion of the United States could be imminent and that the Soviet Union was about to engulf the world.

It is widely accepted that the United States now faces a real possibility of succumbing to the power of an alien regime unless the right policies are pursued. [This book's aim] is, first, to show the American citizen clearly and factually what the results of this possible Soviet domination could be and how it would affect him or her personally; and second, to give some serious advice on how to survive."[43]

Conquest supported the Reagan defense buildup and asked for an increase of expenses on US defense budget, claiming that in the nuclear field NATO was only possibly matching USSR military power:

We live in dangerous times. Such miscalculations are very possible. But they are not inevitable. The American people and their representatives have it in their power to prevent their country from undergoing the ordeal we have described. A democratic government, with all its distractions and disadvantages, ... It is not infallible, it is slow to learn, and it is willing to grasp at comfortable illusions; but it may yet act decisively"[44] "But why should we fear that such an ordeal may face us? The economic potential of the West in gross national product is far greater than that of the Soviet Union....In fact, the Soviet Union is economically far behind the United States. American technology is always a generation ahead of theirs. They have to turn to the United States for wheat. The Soviet economy is at a dead end. The Communist system has failed to win support in any of the countries of Eastern Europe. The Soviet idea has no attractions. On any calculation—of economic power or social advance or intellectual progress there could be no question of the Russians imposing their will. But in terms of actual military power, the West's advantage does not seem to have been made use of. It is at least matched, and many would say overmatched, in the nuclear field; the Western forces in Europe have less than half the striking power of their opponents. It is no good our being more advanced than they are if this is not translated into power—both military power and political willpower."[45]

In 1986 Conquest affirmed that "a science-fiction attitude is a great help in understanding the Soviet Union. It isn't so much whether they're good or bad, exactly; they're not bad or good as we'd be bad or good. It's far better to look at them as Martians than as people like us."[41]

Reflections on a Ravaged Century (1999) edit

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Conquest on Reflections on a Ravaged Century, December 19, 1999, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Conquest of Reflections on a Ravaged Century, January 19, 2000, C-SPAN

Reflections on a Ravaged Century is a book devoted to the psychological roots of fanaticism, in which Conquest argues that Communism and Nazism were equal and more twins than opposites.[46]

There is much more in this book about communism than Nazism, partly because of Conquest's greater expertise on communism, and partly because comparatively few Western intellectuals became Nazis. He focuses mainly on attacks on intellectuals in the West who became communists because they felt or believed that this was "anti-fascism" or "anti-Nazism".[46]

Laws of politics edit

Conquest posited two laws of politics, apparently not referenced in any of his books but as observations he made in conversations while alive:[47]

  1. Generally speaking, everybody is reactionary on subjects he knows about.
  2. Every organisation appears to be headed by secret agents of its opponents.

Conquest's first and second law are attested by at least two sources.[47] On 14 February 2003, Andrew Brown wrote of Conquest's campaign against the expansion of university education that "[f]rom this period dates 'Conquest's Law', which states that 'Everyone is a reactionary about subjects he understands'. This was later supplemented with the balancing rule that every organisation behaves as if it is run by secret agents of its opponents."[5] In his 1991 Memoirs, Kingsley Amis wrote of Conquest that "he was to point out that, while very 'progressive' on the subject of colonialism and other matters I was ignorant of, I was a sound reactionary about education, of which I had some understanding and experience. From my own and others' example he formulated his famous First Law, which runs, 'Generally speaking, everybody is reactionary on subjects he knows about.' (The Second Law, more recent, says, 'Every organisation appears to be headed by secret agents of its opponents.')"[48]

On 25 June 2003, John Derbyshire wrote in the National Review Online's blog The Corner that "[a]s best I can remember", Conquest conjectured three laws of politics:[49]

  1. Everyone is conservative about what he knows best.
  2. Any organization not explicitly right-wing sooner or later becomes left-wing.
  3. The simplest way to explain the behavior of any bureaucratic organization is to assume that it is controlled by a cabal of its enemies.

Derbyshire commented: "Of the Second Law, Conquest gave the Church of England and Amnesty International as examples. Of the third, he noted that a bureaucracy sometimes actually IS controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies — e.g. the postwar British secret service." For these statements, Conquest would become well known among certain thinkers, especially online conservatives; however, Derbyshire cited no source for them and implied his memory was not certain on the matter. Indeed, the second law given here is O'Sullivan's first law, which was stated by John O'Sullivan in his article "O'Sullivan's First Law" in the 27 October 1989 print issue of the National Review, in which he also references Derbyshire's Conquest's third law as Conquest's second law:

That is explained by O'Sullivan's First Law: All organizations that are not actually right-wing will over time become left-wing. I cite as supporting evidence the ACLU, the Ford Foundation, and the Episcopal Church. The reason is, of course, that people who staff such bodies tend to be the sort who don't like private profit, business, making money, the current organization of society, and, by extension, the Western world. At which point Michels's Iron Law of Oligarchy takes over — and the rest follows.

Is there any law which enables us to predict the behavior of right-wing organizations? As it happens, there is: Conquest's Second Law (formulated by the Sovietologist Robert Conquest):

The behavior of an organization can best be predicted by assuming it to be controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies. Examples: virtually any conservative party anywhere, the Ronald Lauder for Mayor campaign, and the British secret service. That last example is, however, flawed, since the British secret service actually was controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies in the form of Kim Philby, Anthony Blunt, et al. In which case, Conquest's Law should have operated to make M1-6 [sic] a crack anti-Soviet intelligence service of James Bond proportions. But these are deep waters.[50]

Personal life edit

Conquest was married four times, first in 1942 to Joan Watkins, with whom he had two sons. They divorced in 1948.[9] There followed a marriage to Tatiana Mihailova (1948–1962),[9] whom he had helped escape from Bulgaria.[1] She was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1951. In 1962 he married Caroleen MacFarlane; they divorced in 1978.[9] That year he began dating Elizabeth Neece Wingate, a lecturer in English and the daughter of a United States Air Force colonel. He and Wingate married in 1979. When he died in 2015, he had several grandchildren from his sons and stepdaughter.[1][5]

Later life edit

 
Conquest (left) receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Aretha Franklin (middle) and Alan Greenspan (right) at the White House, November 2005

In 1981 Conquest moved to California to take up a post as Senior Research Fellow and Scholar-Curator of the Russian and Commonwealth of Independent States Collection at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, where he remained a Fellow.[9] In 1985 he signed a petition in support of the anti-Communist Contras (Nicaragua).[51] He was a fellow of the Columbia University's Russian Institute, and of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; a distinguished visiting scholar at The Heritage Foundation; a research associate of Harvard University's Ukrainian Research Institute.[1] In 1990 he presented Red Empire, a seven-part mini-series on the Soviet Union produced by Yorkshire Television.[52]

Conquest died in 2015 in Stanford, California, at the age of 98, of respiratory failure as a result of Parkinson's disease.[1][16]

Awards and honors edit

Conquest was a Fellow of the British Academy, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Society of Literature, and the British Interplanetary Society, and a Member of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.[9]

His honours include

His awards include:

Selected works edit

Historical and political

Journal articles

  • The Limits of Detente. Foreign Affairs, 46(4), pp. 733–742.
  • Stalin's Successors. (1970) Foreign Affairs, 48(3), pp. 509–524.
  • A New Russia? A New World? (1975) Foreign Affairs, 53(3), pp. 482–497.
  • Revisionizing Stalin's Russia. (1987) The Russian Review, 46(4), pp.386-390.
  • Academe and the Soviet Myth. (1993) The National Interest, 31, pp. 91–98.
  • Toward an English-Speaking Union. (1999) The National Interest, (57), pp. 64–70.
  • Downloading Democracy. (2004) The National Interest, (78), pp. 29–32.

Poetry

  • Poems (1956)[5]
  • Back to Life: Poems from behind the Iron Curtain as translator/editor (1958)
  • Between Mars and Venus (1962)[5]
  • Arias from a Love Opera, and Other Poems (1969)[5]
  • Forays (1979)[5]
  • New and Collected Poems (1988)[5]
  • Demons Don't (1999)[5]
  • Penultimata (2009)[5]
  • A Garden of Erses [limericks, as Jeff Chaucer] (2010)[5]
  • Blokelore and Blokesongs (2012)[5]

Novels

  • A World of Difference (1955)[1]
  • The Egyptologists (with Kingsley Amis, 1965)[1]

Criticism

  • The Abomination of Moab (1979)[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Grimes, William (4 August 2015). "Robert Conquest, Historian Who Documented Soviet Horrors, Dies at 98". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 16 May 2016.
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of British Writers, 19th and 20th Centuries by Christine L. Krueger page 87
  3. ^ Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, Volume 2 By R. Reginald, Douglas Menville, Mary A. Burgess
  4. ^ Supplement to the Alumni Register (October 1920), "Pennsylvania; A Record of the University's Men in the Great War", University of Pennsylvania General Alumni Society, 1920, page 40.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Brown, Andrew (15 February 2003). "Scourge and poet". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  6. ^ "Robert Conquest". Hoover Institution. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
  7. ^ "Vale Robert Conquest, Historian and Poet". Quadrant. quadrant.org.au. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  8. ^ "No. 34837". The London Gazette (Supplement). 23 April 1940. p. 2459.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Robert Conquest, historian – obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 4 August 2015. Archived from the original on 4 August 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d Leigh, David (27 January 1978). "Death of the department that never was". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  11. ^ Timothy Garton Ash. "Orwell's List" (review), New York Review of Books, 23 September 2003.
  12. ^ a b Samuelson, Lennart. "A pathbreaker. Robert Conquest and Soviet studies during the Cold War". Baltic Worlds. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Homberger, Eric (5 August 2015). "Robert Conquest obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  14. ^ Lyons, Richard D. (5 June 1994). "Frederick A. Praeger Dies at 78; Published Books on Communism". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  15. ^ Conquest, Robert (1968). The Great Terror (1st ed.).
  16. ^ a b c d Cronin, Brenda; Cullison, Alan (4 August 2015). "Robert Conquest, Seminal Historian of Soviet Misrule, Dies at 98". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  17. ^ Robert Conquest, Preface, The Great Terror: A Reassessment: 40th Anniversary Edition, Oxford University Press, USA, 2007. p. xviii
  18. ^ Robert Conquest, The Great Terror: A Reassessment, Oxford University Press (1990) ISBN 0-19-507132-8, pp. 466–75.
  19. ^ Conquest, Robert. "Letter to the Editors", The New York Review of Books, 12 April 2007.
  20. ^ J. Arch Getty; Gábor T. Rittersporn; Viktor N. Zemskov (October 1993). "Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Pre-War Years: A First Approach on the Basis of Archival Evidence" (PDF). American Historical Review. 98 (4): 1043. doi:10.2307/2166597. JSTOR 2166597. (PDF) from the original on 28 August 2008.
  21. ^ Defty, Andrew (2 December 2013). Britain, America and Anti-Communist Propaganda 1945-53: The Information Research Department. Routledge. p. 3. ISBN 978-1317791690.
  22. ^ Wheatcroft, Stephen G. (1999). "Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police: The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data. Not the Last Word" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 51 (2): 340–342. doi:10.1080/09668139999056. (PDF) from the original on 4 July 2007.
  23. ^ Wheatcroft, S. G. (2000). "The Scale and Nature of Stalinist Repression and its Demographic Significance: On Comments by Keep and Conquest" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 52 (6): 1143–1159. doi:10.1080/09668130050143860. PMID 19326595. S2CID 205667754. (PDF) from the original on 28 August 2008.
  24. ^ Ignatieff, Michael (23 March 2000). "The Man Who Was Right". New York Review of Books. 47 (5). Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  25. ^ Moyihan, Michael C. (20 August 2011). "How a True Believer Keeps the Faith". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  26. ^ Hobsbawm, Eric (2011). On History. Hachette UK. p. Chapter 19. ISBN 978-1780220512.
  27. ^ "Robert Conquest an appreciation". nationalreview.com. 5 August 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  28. ^ Wheatcroft, Stephen (June 2006). "Stalin and the Soviet Famine of 1932-33: A Reply to Ellman" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 58 (4): 625–633. (PDF) from the original on 18 August 2017 – via JSTOR.
  29. ^ Wheatcroft, Stephen G.; Davies, R. W. (2016). The Years of Hunger: Soviet Agriculture, 1931–1933. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 441. ISBN 9780230273979.
  30. ^ Priestland, David (May 2011). "The Kirov Murder and Soviet History". History Today. 61 (5). Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  31. ^ The Whisperers, Orlando Figes, Allen Lane 2007, p. 236n
  32. ^ Getty, J. Arch, Origins of the Great Purges: The Soviet Communist Party Reconsidered, 1933-38, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987), p. 207.
  33. ^ David Yezzi, Yale Review, Volume 98, Issue 2 (April 2010), p. 183 ff.
  34. ^ . waywiser-press.com. Archived from the original on 15 January 2014.
  35. ^ Haven, Cynthia (16 August 2010). "Stanford legend Robert Conquest: new books at 93 for the historian and poet". Stanford Report. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  36. ^ "Robert Conquest". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  37. ^ Zachary Leader, ed., The Movement Reconsidered, Oxford University Press, 2009.
  38. ^ BBC Radio 4 Publicity (29 April 2008). "Mr Larkin's Awkward Day". BBC Radio 4.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  39. ^ Robert Conquest, 'Solzhenitsyn, A Genius with a Blindspot', Sunday Times, 10 August 2008; p. A15
  40. ^ Collected Poems, Robert Conquest
  41. ^ a b Hillier, Bevis (19 November 1986). "Harvest' of Soviet Terrorism Reaped by Historian Conquest". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  42. ^ O'Sullivan, John (14 August 2015). "What to Make of the Guardian's Shameful Robert Conquest Obituary?". National Review. nationalreview.com. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  43. ^ Conquest, Robert; Manchip White, Jon (1984). What to Do When the Russians Come: a Survivor's Guide. Stein and Day. p. 7. ISBN 0812829859. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  44. ^ Conquest, Robert; Manchip White, Jon (1984). What to Do When the Russians Come: a Survivor's Guide. Stein and Day. p. 175. ISBN 0812829859. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  45. ^ Conquest, Robert; Manchip White, Jon (1984). What to Do When the Russians Come: a Survivor's Guide. Stein and Day. pp. 176–177. ISBN 0812829859. Retrieved 24 September 2015.
  46. ^ a b Hitchens, Christopher (26 November 1999). "Against sinister perfectionism". The Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  47. ^ a b Vogel, Martin (17 December 2018). "Tracking down Conquest's law on organisations". Vogel Wakefield. from the original on 11 October 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  48. ^ Amis, Kingsley (2012) [1991]. Memoirs (E-book ed.). Random House. p. 146. ISBN 9781446414668. Retrieved 13 October 2021 – via Google Books.
  49. ^ Derbyshire, John (25 June 2003). "Conquest's Laws". National Review. from the original on 11 October 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  50. ^ O'Sullivan, John (27 October 1989). . National Review. Archived from the original on 15 July 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  51. ^ "Quand Bernard-Henri Lévy pétitionnait contre le régime légal du Nicaragua". 1 October 2009.
  52. ^ McCannon, John (Fall 1998). "Red Empire". The Journal for Multi Media History. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  53. ^ "Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients". Georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  54. ^ "No. 54255". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 December 1995. p. 3.
  55. ^ "No. 40366". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1954. p. 13.
  56. ^ "Ukraine honors Robert Conquest with Presidential Medal of Honor". Ukrweekly.com. 24 September 2006. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  57. ^ "Stanford Report, 21 June 2006". News.stanford.edu. 21 June 2006. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  58. ^ Jay, Mike. (2013) "Who Were the Dedicatees of Powell’s Works?" The Anthony Powell Society Newsletter.50 (spring): 9-10.
  59. ^ "Streets of world-famous researchers of the Holodomor appeared in Dnipro". Istorychna Pravda (in Ukrainian). 7 February 2024. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  60. ^ . dandavidprize.org. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
  61. ^ National Advisory Council. Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 20 May 2011.

External links edit

  • Robert Conquest at IMDb
  • Scourge and Poet, a profile of Robert Conquest
  • articles by and about Robert Conquest at the New York Review of Books
  • "Stanford legend Robert Conquest: new books at 93 for the historian and poet," by Cynthia Haven, Stanford Report, August 16, 2010
  • , article by Robert Conquest at National Review Online
  • at the Hoover Institution
  • at PBS
  • Robert Conquest profile at Spartacus site
  • Remembering Robert Conquest. The Hoover Institution.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Dunlop, J., & Naimark, N. (2016). "Robert Conquest, 1917–2015". Slavic Review. 75(1), 238–239. doi:10.5612/slavicreview.75.1.238

robert, conquest, george, robert, acworth, conquest, frsl, july, 1917, august, 2015, british, american, historian, poet, novelist, briefly, member, communist, party, great, britain, later, wrote, several, books, against, communism, frslconquest, 1987borngeorge. George Robert Acworth Conquest CMG OBE FBA FRSL 15 July 1917 3 August 2015 was a British American historian poet and novelist 1 He was briefly a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain but later wrote several books against Communism Robert ConquestCMG OBE FBA FRSLConquest in 1987BornGeorge Robert Acworth Conquest 1917 07 15 15 July 1917Great Malvern Worcestershire EnglandDied3 August 2015 2015 08 03 aged 98 Stanford California U S OccupationHistorian poetNationalityBritishCitizenshipAmericanEducationWinchester CollegeAlma materUniversity of GrenobleMagdalen College OxfordNotable worksThe Great TerrorThe Harvest of SorrowNotable awardsSee belowSpouseJoan Watkins m 1942 div 1948 wbr Tatiana Mihailova m 1948 div 1962 wbr Caroleen MacFarlane m 1964 div 1978 wbr Elizabeth Wingate m 1979 wbr Children3A long time research fellow at Stanford University s Hoover Institution Conquest was most notable for his work on the Soviet Union His books included The Great Terror Stalin s Purges of the 1930s 1968 The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivisation and the Terror Famine 1986 and Stalin Breaker of Nations 1991 He was also the author of two novels and several collections of poetry Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 War years 2 2 Information Research Department 2 3 Writing 3 Historical works 3 1 The Great Terror 1968 3 2 The Harvest of Sorrow 1986 3 3 Stalin and the Kirov Murder 1989 4 Poetry and literature 4 1 Poems 4 2 Novels 5 Political works 5 1 What to Do When the Russians Come 1984 5 2 Reflections on a Ravaged Century 1999 5 3 Laws of politics 6 Personal life 7 Later life 8 Awards and honors 9 Selected works 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education editConquest was born in Great Malvern Worcestershire 1 to an American father Robert Folger Wescott Conquest and an English mother Rosamund Alys Acworth 2 3 His father served in an American Ambulance Field Service unit with the French Army in World War I and was awarded the Croix de Guerre with Silver Star in 1916 4 Conquest was educated at Winchester College where he won an exhibition to study Philosophy Politics and Economics PPE at Magdalen College Oxford He took a gap year spending time at the University of Grenoble and in Bulgaria and returning to Oxford in 1937 where he joined the Communist Party of Great Britain and the Carlton Club 5 He was awarded an MA in PPE and a DLitt in history 6 Career editWar years edit In Lisbon on an American passport at the outbreak of the Second World War Conquest returned to England 7 As the Communist Party of Great Britain denounced the war in 1939 as imperialist and capitalist Conquest broke with it and was commissioned into the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 20 April 1940 serving with the regiment until 1946 8 5 In 1943 he was posted to the School of Slavonic and East European Studies later part of University College London to study Bulgarian 9 The following year he was posted to Bulgaria as a liaison officer to the Bulgarian forces fighting under Soviet command attached to the Third Ukrainian Front then to the Allied Control Commission At the end of the war he joined the Foreign Office returning to the British Legation in Sofia where he remained as the press officer 1 In 1948 he left Bulgaria when he was recalled to London under a minor diplomatic cloud after he had helped smuggle two Bulgarians out of the country 9 Information Research Department edit In 1948 Conquest joined the Foreign Office s Information Research Department IRD a propaganda counter offensive unit created by the Labour Attlee government 10 in order to collect and summarize reliable information about Soviet and communist misdoings to disseminate it to democratic journalists politicians and trade unionists and to support financially and otherwise anticommunist publications 11 The IRD was also engaged in manipulating public opinion 12 Conquest was remembered there as a brilliant arrogant figure who had 10 people reporting to him 5 He continued to work at the Foreign Office until 1956 becoming increasingly involved in the intellectual counter offensive against communism 9 In 1949 Conquest s assistant Celia Kirwan later Celia Goodman approached George Orwell for information to help identify Soviet sympathisers Orwell s list discovered after her death in 2002 included Guardian and Observer journalists as well as E H Carr and Charlie Chaplin 13 Conquest like Orwell fell for the beautiful Celia Kirwan who inspired him to write several poems 9 One of his foreign office colleagues was Alan Maclean brother of Donald Maclean one of the Philby spy ring who fled to Russia with Guy Burgess in 1951 When his brother defected Alan resigned then went to Macmillan and published a book of Conquest s poems 5 At the Foreign Office Conquest wrote several papers that sowed the seeds for his later work One on the Soviet means of obtaining confessions was elaborated on in The Great Terror Other papers were Peaceful Co existence in Soviet Propaganda and Theory and United Fronts a Communist Tactic 9 In 1950 Conquest served briefly as First Secretary in the British Delegation to the United Nations citation needed Writing edit In 1956 Conquest left the Foreign Office and became a freelance writer and historian 9 After he left he says the Information Research Department IRD suggested to him that he could combine some of the data he had gathered from Soviet publications into a book 10 During the 1960s he edited eight volumes of work produced by the IRD published in London by the Bodley Head as the Soviet Studies Series 10 Many of his Foreign Office works were published this way 9 In the United States the material was republished as The Contemporary Soviet Union Series by Frederick Praeger who had previously published several books on communism at the request of the CIA 10 in addition to works by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Milovan Đilas Howard Fast and Charles Patrick Fitzgerald 14 In 1962 1963 Conquest was literary editor of The Spectator but he resigned when he found the job interfering with his historical writing His first books on the Soviet Union were Common Sense About Russia 1960 The Soviet Deportation of Nationalities 1960 and Power and Policy in the USSR 1961 His other early works on the Soviet Union included Courage of Genius The Pasternak Affair 1961 and Russia After Khrushchev 1965 9 Historical works editThe Great Terror 1968 edit Main article The Great Terror book In 1968 Conquest published what became his best known work The Great Terror Stalin s Purge of the Thirties the first comprehensive research of the Great Purge which took place in the Soviet Union between 1934 and 1939 Many reviewers at the time were not impressed by his way of writing about the Great Terror which was in the tradition of great men who make history 12 The book was based mainly on information which had been made public either officially or by individuals during the so called Khrushchev Thaw in the period 1956 64 It also drew on accounts by Russian and Ukrainian emigres and exiles dating back to the 1930s and on an analysis of official Soviet documents such as the Soviet census 15 The most important aspect of the book was that it widened the understanding of the purges beyond the previous narrow focus on the Moscow trials of disgraced Communist Party of the Soviet Union leaders such as Nikolai Bukharin and Grigory Zinoviev who were executed shortly thereafter The question of why these leaders had pleaded guilty and confessed to various crimes at the trials had become a topic of discussion for a number of western writers and helped inspire anti Communist tracts such as George Orwell s Nineteen Eighty Four and Arthur Koestler s Darkness at Noon 16 Conquest argued that the trials and executions of these former Communist leaders were a minor detail of the purges By his estimates Stalinist purges had led to the deaths of some 20 million people He later stated that the total number of deaths could hardly be lower than some thirteen to fifteen million 17 Conquest sharply criticized Western intellectuals such as Beatrice and Sidney Webb George Bernard Shaw Jean Paul Sartre Walter Duranty Sir Bernard Pares Harold Laski D N Pritt Theodore Dreiser Bertolt Brecht Owen Lattimore and Romain Rolland as well as American ambassador Joseph Davies accusing them of being dupes of Stalin and apologists of his regime Conquest cites various comments made by them where he argues they were denying excusing or justifying various aspects of the purges 18 After the opening up of the Soviet archives detailed information was released that Conquest argued supported his conclusions When Conquest s publisher asked him to expand and revise The Great Terror Conquest is famously said to have suggested the new version of the book be titled I Told You So You Fucking Fools In fact the mock title was jokingly proposed by Conquest s old friend Sir Kingsley Amis The new version was published in 1990 as The Great Terror A Reassessment ISBN 0 19 507132 8 19 The American historian J Arch Getty disagreed writing in 1993 that the archives did not support Conquest s casualty figures 20 In 1995 investigative journalist Paul Lashmar suggested that the reputation of prominent academics such as Robert Conquest was built upon work derived from material provided by the IRD 21 According to Denis Healey The Great Terror was an important influence but one which confirmed people in their views rather than converted them 5 Many aspects of his book continue to be disputed by sovietologist historians and researchers on Russian and Soviet history such as Stephen G Wheatcroft who insists that Conquest s victim totals for Stalinist repressions are too high even in his reassessments 22 23 In 2000 Michael Ignatieff whose family had emigrated from Russia as a result of the Bolshevik Revolution wrote One of the few unalloyed pleasures of old age is living long enough to see yourself vindicated Robert Conquest is currently enjoying this pleasure 24 Conservative historian Paul Johnson one of Thatcher s closest advisers described Conquest as our greatest living historian And in the phrase of Timothy Garton Ash he was Solzhenytsin before Solzhenytsin 5 In 1996 Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm who had been previously attacked by Conquest for his book Age of Extremes 25 praised Conquest s The Great Terror as a remarkable pioneer effort to assess the Stalin Terror However he expressed the view that this work and others were now to be considered obsolete simply because the archival sources are now available As a result he wrote there was no need for fragmentary sources and guesswork W hen better or more complete data are available they must take the place of poor and incomplete ones 26 In 2002 Conquest replied to his revisionist critics They re still talking absolute balls In the academy there remains a feeling of Don t let s be too rude to Stalin He was a bad guy yes but the Americans were bad guys too and so was the British Empire 27 The Harvest of Sorrow 1986 edit Main article The Harvest of Sorrow In 1986 Conquest published The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivisation and the Terror Famine dealing with the collectivization of agriculture in Ukraine and elsewhere in the USSR under Stalin s direction in 1929 31 and the resulting famine in which millions of peasants died due to starvation deportation to labor camps and execution In this book Conquest supported the view that the famine was a planned act of genocide 9 According to historians Stephen Wheatcroft and R W Davies Conquest holds that Stalin wanted the famine and that the Ukrainian famine was deliberately inflicted for its own sake Nevertheless he wrote to them in a letter in 2003 that Stalin purposely inflicted the 1933 famine No What I argue is that with resulting famine imminent he could have prevented it but put Soviet interest other than feeding the starving first thus consciously abetting it 28 29 Stalin and the Kirov Murder 1989 edit For the Trotskyists Kirov s murder was the Stalinist equivalent of the Reichstag fire deliberately started by the Nazis to justify the arrest of German Communists The Trotskyist Menshevik view became the dominant one among western historians popularised in Robert Conquest s influential books 30 In The Great Terror Conquest already undermined the official Soviet story of conspiracy and treason Conquest placed the murder in 1934 of the Leningrad party boss Sergei Kirov one of Stalin s inner circle as the key to the mechanism of terror He returned to this in Stalin and the Kirov Murder 1989 where he argued that Stalin not only sanctioned Kirov s assassination but used it as a justification for the terror that culminated in 1937 38 though no evidence has been found to confirm Stalin s role in the murder 13 31 32 Poetry and literature editPoems edit In addition to his scholarly work Conquest was a well regarded poet 33 whose poems have been published in various periodicals from 1937 In 1945 he was awarded the PEN Brazil Prize for his war poem For the Death of a Poet about an army friend the poet Drummond Allison killed in Italy and in 1951 he received a Festival of Britain verse prize 34 During his lifetime he had seven volumes of poetry 35 and one of literary criticism 36 published Conquest was a major figure in a prominent British literary circle known as The Movement which also included Philip Larkin and Kingsley Amis Movement poets many of whom bristled at being so labeled rejected the experiments of earlier practitioners such as Ezra Pound 16 He edited in 1956 and 1962 the influential New Lines anthologies introducing works by them as well as Thom Gunn Dennis Enright and others to a wider public 37 He spent 1959 60 as visiting poet at the University of Buffalo Several of his poems were published in The New Oxford Book of Light Verse 1978 compiled by Amis under the pseudonyms Stuart Howard Jones Victor Gray and Ted Pauker citation needed It emerged from the pages of poet Philip Larkin s published letters that Conquest and Larkin shared an enthusiasm for pornography in the 1950s 9 When Larkin was in Hull Conquest sent him judicious selections of the latest pornography and when he came down to London Conquest took him on shopping trips to the Soho porn shops 13 On one occasion Conquest in 1957 wrote a letter to Larkin purporting to come from the Vice Squad which had found the poet s name on a pornographic publisher s list Larkin panicked and went to see his solicitor convinced that he was going to lose his job as librarian at Hull University before Conquest owned up 9 The true story of the joke became in 2008 Mr Larkin s Awkward Day a comedy radio play by Chris Harrald 38 Soon after his expulsion from the Soviet Union Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn met with Conquest asking him to translate a little poem of his into English verse This was Prussian Nights nearly two thousand lines in ballad metre published in 1977 39 A new Collected Poems edited by Elizabeth Conquest was published in March 2020 by the Waywiser Press 40 Novels edit Conquest had been a member of the British Interplanetary Society since the 1940s and shared Amis s taste for science fiction Starting from 1961 the two writers jointly edited Spectrum five anthologies of new sci fi writing 13 Conquest also proposed to Amis a collaboration based on a draft comic novel that Conquest had completed This was revised by Amis then it appeared under both their names as The Egyptologists 1965 13 The novel is about a secret Egyptological London society that is really a husbands organization serving as an alibi for philanderers 16 41 A reviewer in The New York Times felt that their elaborate little jokes leave an unpleasant taste 13 Later a film version of the novel was cancelled when its star Peter Sellers was called away to Hollywood 42 Conquest published a science fiction novel A World of Difference 1955 1 Political works editWhat to Do When the Russians Come 1984 edit In 1984 Robert Conquest wrote with Jon Manchip White the fictional book What to Do When the Russians Come a Survivor s Guide which however was intended to be a real survival manual in case of Soviet invasion This book as many other works of the mid 1980s in different media like Sir John Hackett s The Third World War the movie Red Dawn and the Milton Bradley game Fortress America starts from the premise that a Soviet ground invasion of the United States could be imminent and that the Soviet Union was about to engulf the world It is widely accepted that the United States now faces a real possibility of succumbing to the power of an alien regime unless the right policies are pursued This book s aim is first to show the American citizen clearly and factually what the results of this possible Soviet domination could be and how it would affect him or her personally and second to give some serious advice on how to survive 43 Conquest supported the Reagan defense buildup and asked for an increase of expenses on US defense budget claiming that in the nuclear field NATO was only possibly matching USSR military power We live in dangerous times Such miscalculations are very possible But they are not inevitable The American people and their representatives have it in their power to prevent their country from undergoing the ordeal we have described A democratic government with all its distractions and disadvantages It is not infallible it is slow to learn and it is willing to grasp at comfortable illusions but it may yet act decisively 44 But why should we fear that such an ordeal may face us The economic potential of the West in gross national product is far greater than that of the Soviet Union In fact the Soviet Union is economically far behind the United States American technology is always a generation ahead of theirs They have to turn to the United States for wheat The Soviet economy is at a dead end The Communist system has failed to win support in any of the countries of Eastern Europe The Soviet idea has no attractions On any calculation of economic power or social advance or intellectual progress there could be no question of the Russians imposing their will But in terms of actual military power the West s advantage does not seem to have been made use of It is at least matched and many would say overmatched in the nuclear field the Western forces in Europe have less than half the striking power of their opponents It is no good our being more advanced than they are if this is not translated into power both military power and political willpower 45 In 1986 Conquest affirmed that a science fiction attitude is a great help in understanding the Soviet Union It isn t so much whether they re good or bad exactly they re not bad or good as we d be bad or good It s far better to look at them as Martians than as people like us 41 Reflections on a Ravaged Century 1999 edit External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Conquest on Reflections on a Ravaged Century December 19 1999 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Conquest of Reflections on a Ravaged Century January 19 2000 C SPANReflections on a Ravaged Century is a book devoted to the psychological roots of fanaticism in which Conquest argues that Communism and Nazism were equal and more twins than opposites 46 There is much more in this book about communism than Nazism partly because of Conquest s greater expertise on communism and partly because comparatively few Western intellectuals became Nazis He focuses mainly on attacks on intellectuals in the West who became communists because they felt or believed that this was anti fascism or anti Nazism 46 Laws of politics edit Conquest posited two laws of politics apparently not referenced in any of his books but as observations he made in conversations while alive 47 Generally speaking everybody is reactionary on subjects he knows about Every organisation appears to be headed by secret agents of its opponents Conquest s first and second law are attested by at least two sources 47 On 14 February 2003 Andrew Brown wrote of Conquest s campaign against the expansion of university education that f rom this period dates Conquest s Law which states that Everyone is a reactionary about subjects he understands This was later supplemented with the balancing rule that every organisation behaves as if it is run by secret agents of its opponents 5 In his 1991 Memoirs Kingsley Amis wrote of Conquest that he was to point out that while very progressive on the subject of colonialism and other matters I was ignorant of I was a sound reactionary about education of which I had some understanding and experience From my own and others example he formulated his famous First Law which runs Generally speaking everybody is reactionary on subjects he knows about The Second Law more recent says Every organisation appears to be headed by secret agents of its opponents 48 On 25 June 2003 John Derbyshire wrote in the National Review Online s blog The Corner that a s best I can remember Conquest conjectured three laws of politics 49 Everyone is conservative about what he knows best Any organization not explicitly right wing sooner or later becomes left wing The simplest way to explain the behavior of any bureaucratic organization is to assume that it is controlled by a cabal of its enemies Derbyshire commented Of the Second Law Conquest gave the Church of England and Amnesty International as examples Of the third he noted that a bureaucracy sometimes actually IS controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies e g the postwar British secret service For these statements Conquest would become well known among certain thinkers especially online conservatives however Derbyshire cited no source for them and implied his memory was not certain on the matter Indeed the second law given here is O Sullivan s first law which was stated by John O Sullivan in his article O Sullivan s First Law in the 27 October 1989 print issue of the National Review in which he also references Derbyshire s Conquest s third law as Conquest s second law That is explained by O Sullivan s First Law All organizations that are not actually right wing will over time become left wing I cite as supporting evidence the ACLU the Ford Foundation and the Episcopal Church The reason is of course that people who staff such bodies tend to be the sort who don t like private profit business making money the current organization of society and by extension the Western world At which point Michels s Iron Law of Oligarchy takes over and the rest follows Is there any law which enables us to predict the behavior of right wing organizations As it happens there is Conquest s Second Law formulated by the Sovietologist Robert Conquest The behavior of an organization can best be predicted by assuming it to be controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies Examples virtually any conservative party anywhere the Ronald Lauder for Mayor campaign and the British secret service That last example is however flawed since the British secret service actually was controlled by a secret cabal of its enemies in the form of Kim Philby Anthony Blunt et al In which case Conquest s Law should have operated to make M1 6 sic a crack anti Soviet intelligence service of James Bond proportions But these are deep waters 50 Personal life editConquest was married four times first in 1942 to Joan Watkins with whom he had two sons They divorced in 1948 9 There followed a marriage to Tatiana Mihailova 1948 1962 9 whom he had helped escape from Bulgaria 1 She was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1951 In 1962 he married Caroleen MacFarlane they divorced in 1978 9 That year he began dating Elizabeth Neece Wingate a lecturer in English and the daughter of a United States Air Force colonel He and Wingate married in 1979 When he died in 2015 he had several grandchildren from his sons and stepdaughter 1 5 Later life edit nbsp Conquest left receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Aretha Franklin middle and Alan Greenspan right at the White House November 2005In 1981 Conquest moved to California to take up a post as Senior Research Fellow and Scholar Curator of the Russian and Commonwealth of Independent States Collection at Stanford University s Hoover Institution where he remained a Fellow 9 In 1985 he signed a petition in support of the anti Communist Contras Nicaragua 51 He was a fellow of the Columbia University s Russian Institute and of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars a distinguished visiting scholar at The Heritage Foundation a research associate of Harvard University s Ukrainian Research Institute 1 In 1990 he presented Red Empire a seven part mini series on the Soviet Union produced by Yorkshire Television 52 Conquest died in 2015 in Stanford California at the age of 98 of respiratory failure as a result of Parkinson s disease 1 16 Awards and honors editConquest was a Fellow of the British Academy the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the Royal Society of Literature and the British Interplanetary Society and a Member of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 9 His honours include Presidential Medal of Freedom 2005 53 Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George CMG 1996 54 Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE 1955 55 Commander Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland 2009 9 Estonian Cross of Terra Mariana 2008 Ukrainian Order of Yaroslav Mudryi 2005 56 57 Hearing Secret Harmonies by Anthony Powell the final volume in Powell s 12 volume sequence A Dance to the Music of Time is dedicated to Conquest 58 A street in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro was renamed after Robert Conquest in February 2024 59 His awards include Selection by the National Endowment for the Humanities to deliver the 1993 Jefferson Lecture the highest honor the U S government bestows for distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities Richard Weaver Award for Scholarly Letters 1999 5 Michael Braude Award for Light Verse American Academy of Arts amp Letters 1997 5 Dan David Prize 2012 60 Conquest was a member of the advisory council of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation 61 Antonovych prize 1987 Selected works editHistorical and political Common Sense About Russia 1960 Power and Policy in the U S S R The Study of Soviet Dynastics 1961 5 The Soviet Deportation of Nationalities 1960 5 Courage of Genius The Pasternak Affair 1961 5 Russia After Khrushchev 1965 5 The Politics of Ideas in the USSR 1967 Soviet Nationalities Policy in Practice 1967 Industrial Workers in the USSR 1967 Agricultural Workers in the USSR 1968 Religion in the U S S R 1968 The Soviet Political System 1968 The Soviet Police System 1968 Justice and the Legal System in the U S S R 1968 The Great Terror Stalin s Purge of the Thirties 1968 The Great Terror A Reassessment 1990 5 The Great Terror 40th Anniversary Edition 2008 5 Where Marx Went Wrong 1970 5 The Nation Killers The Soviet Deportation of Nationalities 1970 The Human Cost of Soviet Communism Prepared for the Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate 1970 V I Lenin 1972 5 The Russian Tradition with Tibor Szamuely 1974 Kolyma The Arctic Death Camps 1979 5 Present Danger Towards a Foreign Policy 1979 5 We amp They Civic amp Despotic Cultures 1980 5 The Man made Famine in Ukraine with James Mace Michael Novak and Dana Dalrymple 1984 What to Do When the Russians Come A Survivor s Guide with Jon Manchip White 1984 5 Inside Stalin s Secret Police NKVD Politics 1936 1939 1985 5 The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivization and the Terror Famine 1986 5 The Last Empire Nationality and the Soviet Future 1986 Tyrants and Typewriters Communiques in the Struggle for Truth 1989 5 Stalin and the Kirov Murder 1989 5 Stalin Breaker of Nations 1991 5 History Humanity and Truth 1993 5 Reflections on a Ravaged Century 1999 5 The Dragons of Expectation Reality and Delusion in the Course of History W W Norton amp Company 2004 ISBN 0 393 05933 2 Journal articles The Limits of Detente Foreign Affairs 46 4 pp 733 742 Stalin s Successors 1970 Foreign Affairs 48 3 pp 509 524 A New Russia A New World 1975 Foreign Affairs 53 3 pp 482 497 Revisionizing Stalin s Russia 1987 The Russian Review 46 4 pp 386 390 Academe and the Soviet Myth 1993 The National Interest 31 pp 91 98 Toward an English Speaking Union 1999 The National Interest 57 pp 64 70 Downloading Democracy 2004 The National Interest 78 pp 29 32 Poetry Poems 1956 5 Back to Life Poems from behind the Iron Curtain as translator editor 1958 Between Mars and Venus 1962 5 Arias from a Love Opera and Other Poems 1969 5 Forays 1979 5 New and Collected Poems 1988 5 Demons Don t 1999 5 Penultimata 2009 5 A Garden of Erses limericks as Jeff Chaucer 2010 5 Blokelore and Blokesongs 2012 5 Novels A World of Difference 1955 1 The Egyptologists with Kingsley Amis 1965 1 Criticism The Abomination of Moab 1979 1 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k Grimes William 4 August 2015 Robert Conquest Historian Who Documented Soviet Horrors Dies at 98 The New York Times Archived from the original on 16 May 2016 Encyclopedia of British Writers 19th and 20th Centuries by Christine L Krueger page 87 Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature Volume 2 By R Reginald Douglas Menville Mary A Burgess Supplement to the Alumni Register October 1920 Pennsylvania A Record of the University s Men in the Great War University of Pennsylvania General Alumni Society 1920 page 40 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Brown Andrew 15 February 2003 Scourge and poet The Guardian Retrieved 4 August 2015 Robert Conquest Hoover Institution Retrieved 11 February 2019 Vale Robert Conquest Historian and Poet Quadrant quadrant org au Retrieved 15 October 2015 No 34837 The London Gazette Supplement 23 April 1940 p 2459 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Robert Conquest historian obituary The Daily Telegraph 4 August 2015 Archived from the original on 4 August 2015 a b c d Leigh David 27 January 1978 Death of the department that never was The Guardian Retrieved 11 September 2015 Timothy Garton Ash Orwell s List review New York Review of Books 23 September 2003 a b Samuelson Lennart A pathbreaker Robert Conquest and Soviet studies during the Cold War Baltic Worlds Retrieved 22 September 2015 a b c d e f Homberger Eric 5 August 2015 Robert Conquest obituary The Guardian Retrieved 11 September 2015 Lyons Richard D 5 June 1994 Frederick A Praeger Dies at 78 Published Books on Communism The New York Times Retrieved 27 July 2018 Conquest Robert 1968 The Great Terror 1st ed a b c d Cronin Brenda Cullison Alan 4 August 2015 Robert Conquest Seminal Historian of Soviet Misrule Dies at 98 The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 4 August 2015 Robert Conquest Preface The Great Terror A Reassessment 40th Anniversary Edition Oxford University Press USA 2007 p xviii Robert Conquest The Great Terror A Reassessment Oxford University Press 1990 ISBN 0 19 507132 8 pp 466 75 Conquest Robert Letter to the Editors The New York Review of Books 12 April 2007 J Arch Getty Gabor T Rittersporn Viktor N Zemskov October 1993 Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Pre War Years A First Approach on the Basis of Archival Evidence PDF American Historical Review 98 4 1043 doi 10 2307 2166597 JSTOR 2166597 Archived PDF from the original on 28 August 2008 Defty Andrew 2 December 2013 Britain America and Anti Communist Propaganda 1945 53 The Information Research Department Routledge p 3 ISBN 978 1317791690 Wheatcroft Stephen G 1999 Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data Not the Last Word PDF Europe Asia Studies 51 2 340 342 doi 10 1080 09668139999056 Archived PDF from the original on 4 July 2007 Wheatcroft S G 2000 The Scale and Nature of Stalinist Repression and its Demographic Significance On Comments by Keep and Conquest PDF Europe Asia Studies 52 6 1143 1159 doi 10 1080 09668130050143860 PMID 19326595 S2CID 205667754 Archived PDF from the original on 28 August 2008 Ignatieff Michael 23 March 2000 The Man Who Was Right New York Review of Books 47 5 Retrieved 7 October 2015 Moyihan Michael C 20 August 2011 How a True Believer Keeps the Faith The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 9 January 2012 Hobsbawm Eric 2011 On History Hachette UK p Chapter 19 ISBN 978 1780220512 Robert Conquest an appreciation nationalreview com 5 August 2015 Retrieved 18 September 2015 Wheatcroft Stephen June 2006 Stalin and the Soviet Famine of 1932 33 A Reply to Ellman PDF Europe Asia Studies 58 4 625 633 Archived PDF from the original on 18 August 2017 via JSTOR Wheatcroft Stephen G Davies R W 2016 The Years of Hunger Soviet Agriculture 1931 1933 Palgrave Macmillan p 441 ISBN 9780230273979 Priestland David May 2011 The Kirov Murder and Soviet History History Today 61 5 Retrieved 27 September 2015 The Whisperers Orlando Figes Allen Lane 2007 p 236n Getty J Arch Origins of the Great Purges The Soviet Communist Party Reconsidered 1933 38 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1987 p 207 David Yezzi Yale Review Volume 98 Issue 2 April 2010 p 183 ff Robert Conquest Penultimata Note on Robert Conquest waywiser press com Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 Haven Cynthia 16 August 2010 Stanford legend Robert Conquest new books at 93 for the historian and poet Stanford Report Retrieved 4 August 2015 Robert Conquest United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 4 August 2015 Zachary Leader ed The Movement Reconsidered Oxford University Press 2009 BBC Radio 4 Publicity 29 April 2008 Mr Larkin s Awkward Day BBC Radio 4 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Robert Conquest Solzhenitsyn A Genius with a Blindspot Sunday Times 10 August 2008 p A15 Collected Poems Robert Conquest a b Hillier Bevis 19 November 1986 Harvest of Soviet Terrorism Reaped by Historian Conquest Los Angeles Times Retrieved 4 October 2015 O Sullivan John 14 August 2015 What to Make of the Guardian s Shameful Robert Conquest Obituary National Review nationalreview com Retrieved 27 September 2015 Conquest Robert Manchip White Jon 1984 What to Do When the Russians Come a Survivor s Guide Stein and Day p 7 ISBN 0812829859 Retrieved 24 September 2015 Conquest Robert Manchip White Jon 1984 What to Do When the Russians Come a Survivor s Guide Stein and Day p 175 ISBN 0812829859 Retrieved 24 September 2015 Conquest Robert Manchip White Jon 1984 What to Do When the Russians Come a Survivor s Guide Stein and Day pp 176 177 ISBN 0812829859 Retrieved 24 September 2015 a b Hitchens Christopher 26 November 1999 Against sinister perfectionism The Times Literary Supplement Retrieved 25 May 2016 a b Vogel Martin 17 December 2018 Tracking down Conquest s law on organisations Vogel Wakefield Archived from the original on 11 October 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2021 Amis Kingsley 2012 1991 Memoirs E book ed Random House p 146 ISBN 9781446414668 Retrieved 13 October 2021 via Google Books Derbyshire John 25 June 2003 Conquest s Laws National Review Archived from the original on 11 October 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2021 O Sullivan John 27 October 1989 Conquest s Laws National Review Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 13 October 2021 Quand Bernard Henri Levy petitionnait contre le regime legal du Nicaragua 1 October 2009 McCannon John Fall 1998 Red Empire The Journal for Multi Media History Retrieved 23 June 2014 Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipients Georgewbush whitehouse archives gov Retrieved 14 January 2014 No 54255 The London Gazette Supplement 29 December 1995 p 3 No 40366 The London Gazette Supplement 31 December 1954 p 13 Ukraine honors Robert Conquest with Presidential Medal of Honor Ukrweekly com 24 September 2006 Retrieved 14 January 2014 Stanford Report 21 June 2006 News stanford edu 21 June 2006 Retrieved 14 January 2014 Jay Mike 2013 Who Were the Dedicatees of Powell s Works The Anthony Powell Society Newsletter 50 spring 9 10 Streets of world famous researchers of the Holodomor appeared in Dnipro Istorychna Pravda in Ukrainian 7 February 2024 Retrieved 9 February 2024 The Dan David Prize Laureates 2012 Robert Conquest dandavidprize org Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 6 August 2015 National Advisory Council Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation Archived from the original on 20 May 2011 Retrieved 20 May 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Conquest nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Conquest Robert Conquest at IMDb Scourge and Poet a profile of Robert Conquest articles by and about Robert Conquest at the New York Review of Books Stanford legend Robert Conquest new books at 93 for the historian and poet by Cynthia Haven Stanford Report August 16 2010 Where Ignorance Isn t Bliss article by Robert Conquest at National Review Online His biography at the Hoover Institution Great Terror at 40 Elizabeth Farnsworth talks with historian Robert Conquest about his new book Reflections on a Ravaged Century at PBS Robert Conquest profile at Spartacus site Robert Conquest s profile at Stanford University Ukrainian Studies Department webpage Remembering Robert Conquest The Hoover Institution Appearances on C SPAN Dunlop J amp Naimark N 2016 Robert Conquest 1917 2015 Slavic Review 75 1 238 239 doi 10 5612 slavicreview 75 1 238 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Conquest amp oldid 1205465275, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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