Description

Book Synopsis
Captivated at a young age by Russia, Marianna Tax Choldin immersed herself as a student at the University of Chicago in that country’s language and culture. In her book she describes the tension between her strong commitment to freedom of expression and her growing understanding of Russian and Soviet censorship. Fluent in Russian, she travels widely in post-Soviet Russia, speaking with hundreds of Russians about their own censorship history. She writes of the close friendships she formed in Russia, and reflects on her Jewish roots in the country her family had left behind 100 years earlier.

Trade Review
“Marianna Tax Choldin has written a delightful memoir that enlightens us on many topics: censorship, librarianship, Russian culture, and the special challenge of combining motherhood and scholarship. One of our leading Slavic librarians, she long ago left her mark on her profession, and now she beautifully widens that influence.” -- Loren Graham, author of Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union
“Marianna Tax Choldin’s luminous Garden of Broken Statues takes the reader on a deeply personal journal that compellingly exposes the pernicious effects of censorship and the authoritarian impulses it reveals on ordinary human beings from Chicago to Tobolsk, with innumerable stops in between. Witness to some of the late twentieth century’s seminal events, Choldin translates the heroic through the private, revealing with knowing hand, how the genuinely historic is always deeply secluded in the fates of individual human beings.” -- Blair A. Ruble, Vice President for Programs, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C.
“Marianna Tax Choldin has written a memoir of emotional intensity, intellectual depth, and professional expertise on censorship in the Soviet Union and Russia. The book is a wide sweep of personal ties, political and social context, and the changing meaning of public monuments. With a passionate commitment to freedom of speech, the author describes the difficulties and rewards of mounting exhibitions about censorship to a public from whom what has been left out, deliberately mistranslated, or forbidden altogether has been hidden.” -- Ellen Mickiewicz, author of No Illusions: The Voices of Russia’s Future Leaders
Garden of Broken Statues: Exploring Censorship in Russia covers a lot of territory: geographically, from Hyde Park to Moscow to East Bangladesh; ideologically, from Soviet “omni-censorship” to the less systemic challenges to free speech we find in the States; and, above all, interpersonally, as Choldin pays tribute to the people who have shaped her life ... it’s such a wide-ranging book, it might be recommended not only to those interested in Russia or censorship, but also just about all readers of this journal: namely, librarians and information professionals curious about the personal and professional lives of those who have committed the better part of their lives to the cause of international understanding.” -- Scott Schoger, World Libraries Vol 22. No. 1 (2016)

Table of Contents
Introduction

Chapter 1: My American Planet

Chapter 2: My Russian Planet

Chapter 3: Bangladesh and Babies

Chapter 4: Life in the Library

Chapter 5: Dissertation and Book

Chapter 6: My Soviet Censor

Chapter 7: My Soviet Planet

Chapter 8: Katia

Chapter 9: Galina Pavlovna’s Funeral and More Thoughts on Religion

Chapter 10: Madame Censorship Hits the Road

Chapter 11: The Garden of Broken Statues

Acknowledgments

Garden of Broken Statues: Exploring Censorship in

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    A Paperback / softback by Marianna Tax Choldin

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      Publisher: Academic Studies Press
      Publication Date: 01/12/2016
      ISBN13: 9781618115447, 978-1618115447
      ISBN10: 1618115448

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Captivated at a young age by Russia, Marianna Tax Choldin immersed herself as a student at the University of Chicago in that country’s language and culture. In her book she describes the tension between her strong commitment to freedom of expression and her growing understanding of Russian and Soviet censorship. Fluent in Russian, she travels widely in post-Soviet Russia, speaking with hundreds of Russians about their own censorship history. She writes of the close friendships she formed in Russia, and reflects on her Jewish roots in the country her family had left behind 100 years earlier.

      Trade Review
      “Marianna Tax Choldin has written a delightful memoir that enlightens us on many topics: censorship, librarianship, Russian culture, and the special challenge of combining motherhood and scholarship. One of our leading Slavic librarians, she long ago left her mark on her profession, and now she beautifully widens that influence.” -- Loren Graham, author of Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union
      “Marianna Tax Choldin’s luminous Garden of Broken Statues takes the reader on a deeply personal journal that compellingly exposes the pernicious effects of censorship and the authoritarian impulses it reveals on ordinary human beings from Chicago to Tobolsk, with innumerable stops in between. Witness to some of the late twentieth century’s seminal events, Choldin translates the heroic through the private, revealing with knowing hand, how the genuinely historic is always deeply secluded in the fates of individual human beings.” -- Blair A. Ruble, Vice President for Programs, Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C.
      “Marianna Tax Choldin has written a memoir of emotional intensity, intellectual depth, and professional expertise on censorship in the Soviet Union and Russia. The book is a wide sweep of personal ties, political and social context, and the changing meaning of public monuments. With a passionate commitment to freedom of speech, the author describes the difficulties and rewards of mounting exhibitions about censorship to a public from whom what has been left out, deliberately mistranslated, or forbidden altogether has been hidden.” -- Ellen Mickiewicz, author of No Illusions: The Voices of Russia’s Future Leaders
      Garden of Broken Statues: Exploring Censorship in Russia covers a lot of territory: geographically, from Hyde Park to Moscow to East Bangladesh; ideologically, from Soviet “omni-censorship” to the less systemic challenges to free speech we find in the States; and, above all, interpersonally, as Choldin pays tribute to the people who have shaped her life ... it’s such a wide-ranging book, it might be recommended not only to those interested in Russia or censorship, but also just about all readers of this journal: namely, librarians and information professionals curious about the personal and professional lives of those who have committed the better part of their lives to the cause of international understanding.” -- Scott Schoger, World Libraries Vol 22. No. 1 (2016)

      Table of Contents
      Introduction

      Chapter 1: My American Planet

      Chapter 2: My Russian Planet

      Chapter 3: Bangladesh and Babies

      Chapter 4: Life in the Library

      Chapter 5: Dissertation and Book

      Chapter 6: My Soviet Censor

      Chapter 7: My Soviet Planet

      Chapter 8: Katia

      Chapter 9: Galina Pavlovna’s Funeral and More Thoughts on Religion

      Chapter 10: Madame Censorship Hits the Road

      Chapter 11: The Garden of Broken Statues

      Acknowledgments

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