My Disillusionment in Russia

audiobook

My Disillusionment in Russia

by Emma Goldman

EN·~5 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total

MY DISILLUSIONMENT IN RUSSIA

0:22

PREFACE

19:09

CHAPTER I DEPORTATION TO RUSSIA

11:48

CHAPTER II PETROGRAD

12:59

CHAPTER III DISTURBING THOUGHTS

12:10

CHAPTER IV MOSCOW: FIRST IMPRESSIONS

17:05

CHAPTER V MEETING PEOPLE

12:44

CHAPTER VI PREPARING FOR AMERICAN DEPORTEES

12:06

CHAPTER VII REST HOMES FOR WORKERS

7:36

CHAPTER VIII THE FIRST OF MAY IN PETROGRAD

5:36

Description

A young American woman arrives in post‑war Russia brimming with hope, convinced that the fledgling Soviet state will embody a bold, collective project of reconstruction. She throws herself into daily life, learning the language, observing the fervor of workers and the promises of a new society. Yet the bustling streets and grand slogans soon clash with a harsher, more chaotic reality that she struggles to understand.

As months turn into a year, her optimism wanes. The brutal suppression of dissent, the grim atmosphere of the Kronstadt uprising, and the crushing weight of a regime that devours its own ideals force her to confront a painful truth: the revolution she admired is morphing into something far more oppressive. Determined to bear witness, she decides to leave Russia and record her experiences, offering a candid, personal view of a nation in turmoil.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (295K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Tim Lindell, Martin Pettit, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)

Release date

2019-09-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman

1869–1940

A fierce speaker and writer, she became one of the most recognizable radical voices of her time, arguing for free speech, workers' rights, women's independence, and personal freedom. Her life moved from immigration and factory work to prison, deportation, and exile, but she kept writing and lecturing to the end.

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