Mikhail (Aleksandrovich) Sholokhov (1905-1984) - born May 11, 1905 (May 24, New
Style)
Russian writer, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1965.
Sholokhov's best-known work is the novel Quiet Flows the Don (1928-40), the
finest realist novel about the Revolution. While Leo Tolstoi's novel War and
Peace (1863-69) showed how the Napoleonic campaigns united Russians, Quiet
Flows the Don portrayed the destruction of the old system, and the birth of a
new society. After this magnificent novel, Sholokhov's career as a writer
started to go down and reached its bottom with the novella 'The Fate of a Man'
(1956-57). It is among the least impressive works produced by a Nobel writer,
along with Hemingway's posthumously published book True at First Light (1999).
"It was the first really warm days of the year. But it was good to sit there
alone, abandoning myself completely to the stillness and solitude, to take off
my old army cap and let the the breeze dry my hair after heavy work of rowing,
and to stare idly at the white big-breasted clouds floating in the faded blue."
(from 'The Fate of a Man')
Mikhail Sholokhov was born in the Kruzhlinin hamlet, part of stanitsa
Veshenskaya, former Region of the Don Cossack Army. His father was a Russian
of the lower middle class. He had many occupations, including farming, cattle
trading, and milling. Sholokhov's illiterate mother came from an Ukrainian
peasant stock and was the widow of a Cossack. She learned to read and write in
order to correspond with her son. Sholokhov attended schools in Kargin, Moscow,
Boguchar, and Veshenskaia, but his formal education ended in 1918 when the
civil war reached the Upper Don region. Sholokhov joined the Bolshevik (Red)
Army, serving in the Don region during civil war. During this period Sholokhov
witnessed the anti-Bolshevik uprising of the Upper Don Cossacks and took part
in fighting anti-Soviet partisans, remnants of the white army. These
experiences were later recounted in his works.
When the Bolsheviks had secured their control of power, Sholokhov went to
Moscow, where he supported himself by doing manual labour. He was a
longshoreman, stonemason, and accountant (1922-24), but also participated in
writers "seminars" intermittently. His first work to appear in print was the
satirical article 'A Test' (1922), which was published in the Moscow newspaper
Yunosheskaya Pravda. 'The Birthmark,' Sholokhov's first story, appeared when
he was 19. In 1924 Sholokhov returned Veshesnkaya and devoted himself entirely
to writing. In the same year he married Mariia Petrovna Gromoslavskaia; they
had two daughters and two sons.
Sholokhov's first book was , DONSKIE RASSKAZY (1925, Tales of the Don), a
collection of short stories. The dominant theme in the stories is the bitter
political strife within a village or a family during the civil war and the
early 1920s. Sholokhov joined the Communist Party in 1932, and in 1937 he was
elected to the Soviet Parliament. He wrote to Stalin about the brutal
mistreatment of collective farmers in 1933 and complained about mass arrests
in 1938. This letter led to a treason case against the author, but he was
spared and promoted as the leading figure of the Soviet literary establishment.
Stalin followed closely Sholokhov's literary career and influenced publication
of his works.
Sholokhov gained world fame with his novel TICHII DON (Quiet Flows the Don),
which won the Stalin Prize in 1941. The work was originally published in
serialized form between the years 1928 and 1940. The author was 22 years old
when he submitted the first volume for publication and 25 when three-quarters
of the work was composed. In the second volume Sholokhov especially relied on
documentary material. The third book's frank account of ill treatment of
Cossacks by Communists caused the journal Oktiabr to suspend publication in
1929. Permission to resume was only accorded after reference to Stalin himself.
Book 4 did not appear in complete form until 1940, 15 years after the young
author had first written its early scenes.
"I will be happy if the English reader sees behind descriptions of the life of
Don Cossacks, so strange to him, those colossal shifts in everyday existence
and human psychology which occurred as the result of the war and the
revolution." (Sholokhov in his foreword to the English edition)
Quiet Flows the Don presents the struggle of the Whites against the Reds more
or less objectively. Sholokhov portrays the Cossacks realistically and
reproduces their speech faithfully. This also inspired orthodox Communist to
accuse the writer of adopting uncritically a conservative Cossack point of
view. The story traces the progress of the Cossack Grigory Melekhov, a tragic
hero. He is based on a historical prototype, Kharlampii Ermakov, one of the
first Cossacks to rise against the communist in 1919. He was later imprisoned
and shot in 1929. Like many figures of classical tragedy, Melekhov fate is
destined beforehand. He first supports the Whites, then the Reds, and finally
joins nationalist guerrillas in their conflict with the Red Army. Back at home
he is destroyed by a former friend, a hardline communist. Another line of the
plot is the story of Grigory's tragic love. In the narration nature
description has a central place. Sholokhov's prose is ornamental with prolific
use of color, figures of speech, and careful attention to details. Peter
Seeger's famous song, 'Where Have All the Flowers Gone', was inspired by a
lullaby from the first volume, The Don Flows Home to the Sea. A Cossack woman
sings: "And where are the reeds? The girls have pulled them up. / Where are
the girls? The girls have taken husbands. / Where are the Cossacks? They've
gone to the war."
During World War II Sholokhov wrote about the Soviet war efforts for various
journals, among them Pravda and Krasnaia zvedza. He received Stalin Prize for
Literature in 1941 and Lenin Prize in 1960. Sholokhov's second novel. Virgin
Soil Upturned, appeared in two parts, 'Seeds of Tomorrow' in 1932 and 'Harvest
on the Don' in 1960. The novel depicted collectivization of agriculture in a
Don Cossack village. It is perhaps the best-known and most sympathetic
description of this period. It also became required reading for all collective
farm directors. The dramatic events are written in the first volume in rapid
sequence with the touch of a journalistic report. The second volume, which
covers only the summer of 1930, shows the decline of Sholokhov's artistic
ambitions and ideological orthodoxy. The reader learns nothing about the
terrorism and famine of 1932-33. During the 1933 famine Sholokhov himself
saved thousands of lives by persuading Stalin to send grain to the Upper Don
region. No new literary work of his appeared since 1969.
Sholokhov accompanied in 1959 the Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev on a trip
to Europe and the United States, and in 1961 he became a member of the Central
Committee. In most of his speeches and journalistic writings Sholokhov
faithfully followed the official policy of the day. Sholokhov died on January
21, 1984 in Veshenskaya, where he had lived from 1924. By 1980 almost seventy-nine
million copies of his works had been printed in the Soviet Union in eighty-four
languages.
"The story of Mikhail Sholokhov's rise to his reign as king of Soviet literary
officialdom is none other than a supreme farce. Decade after decade his pen
failed to create anything worth reading. Meanwhile, his mouth created nothing
but propagandistic banalities." (Vassily Aksyonov, an exiled Russian novelist
in the New York Times, March 10, 1985)
Quiet Flows the Don is Sholokhov most controversial work and it has been
alleged by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn among others, that much of the novel was
plagiarized from the writer Fyodor Kryukov, a Cossak and anti-Bolshevik, who
died in 1920 of typhoid fever. Several studies has been published on this
subject: R.A. Medvedev's Problems in the Literary Biography of Mikhail
Sholokhov (1977) was criticized in Slavic and East European Journal in 1976 by
Herman Ermolaev. Additional information is in A Brian Murphy's studies of
Tikhiy Don in the New Zealand Slavonic Journal (1975-77) and the Journal of
Russian Studies, no. 34 (1977). Sholokhov's other works are not on his
masterwork's level, but the accusations remain largely unproven. Critics have
argued, that he could not have written all or part of the novel because of his
young age and because Quiet Flows the Don described atrocities on both sides
impartially. In 1984 Geir Kjetsaa and others published their study The
Authorship of the Quiet Don, where computer study supported the authorship of
Sholokhov. Most of the manuscripts were lost when the Germans occupied
Veshenskaya , but in 1987 some two thousand pages were discovered and
authenticated.V.P. Fomenko and T.G. Fomenko have applied quantatitative
analysis to the works of Sholokhov, concluding that parts of 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5,
as well as a large section of the part 6 of the novel were not written by
Sholokhov. (see History: Fiction or Science. Chronology 2, by Anatoly T.
Fomenko, 2005)
For further reading: Russian Fiction and Soviet Ideology by E. Simmons (1958);
Mikhali Sholokhov: A Critical Introduction by D.H. Stewart (1967); Sholokhov
by C.G. Bearne (1969); The World of Young Sholokhov by M. Klimenko (1972);
Sholokhov: A Critical Appreciation by L. Yakimenko (1973); Problems in the
Literary Biography of Mikhail Sholokhov by R. Medvedev (1977); Mikhail
Sholokhov and His Art by H. Ermolaev (1982); The Authorship of the 'Quiet Don'
by Geir Kjetsaa et. al. (1984); Meetings With Sholokhov by A.V. Sofronov
(1985); "Tikhii Don": Rasskazy o protitipakh by G.Ia Sivovolov (1991); Kto
napisal "Tikhii Don" by Lev Efimovich Kolodnyi (1995); Sholokhov's 'Tikhii Don
by A.B. Murphy, V.P. Butt and Herman Ermolaev (1997, 2 vols.) - For further
information (in Russian): Mikhail Sholokhov -
Selected writings:
* DONSKIE RASSKAZY, 1925 - Tales of the Don
* LAZUREVAJA STEP, 1926 - Lasuurinsinen aro
* TICHII DON, 4 vol., 1928-1940 - And Quiet Flows the Don, 1934 - The Don
Flows Home to the Sea, 1940 (trans. by Stephen Garry) - The Silent Don, 1941 -
best English translation apperared under the tile of Quit Flows the Don in
1966 - Hiljaa virtaa Don (suom. Juhani Konkka) - film 1957-58, dir. Sergei
Gerasimov, starring P. Glebov, L. Khitryaeva, Z. Kirienko and E. Bystrltskaya
* PODNYATAYA TSELINA, 1932-1960 - Virgin Soil Upturned, 1935 (trans. by R. C.
Daglish) - Harvest on the Don, 1960 - Aron raivaajat (suom. Juhani Konkka)
* ONI SRAZHALIS ZA RODINU, 1942 - They Fought for Their Country - He
taistelivat isänmaan puolesta
* NAUKA NENAVISTI, 1942 - Hate / The Science of Hatred
* SLOVO O RODINE, 1951
* SUDBA TŠELOVEKA, 1956-57 - The Fate of a Man - film 1959, dir. by Sergei
Bondarchuk, starring Sergei Bondarchuk, Pavlik Boriskin, Zinaida Kirienko,
Pavel Volkov, Iurii Avelin, K. Alekseev
* SOBRANIE SOCHINENII, 1956-58 (8 vols.)
* ONI SRAZHALIS ZA RODINU, 1959 - They Fought for their Country
* SOBRANIE SOCHINENY, 1962 (8 vols.)
* Early Stories, 1966
* One Man's Destiny, and Other Stories, Articles, and Sketches, 1923-1963,
1967
* Fierce and Gentle Warriors, 1967
* PO VELENIJU DUŠI, 1970 - At the Bidding of the Heart
* SOBRANIE SOCHINENY, 1975 (8 vols.)
* ROSSIYA V SERDTSE, 1975
* SLOVO O RODINE, 1980
* Collected Works, 1984 (8 vols.)
* SOBRANIE SOCHINENII, 1985 (8 vols.)
* SHOLOKHOV I STALIN, 1994