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Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1918 – 2008) was a Russian author, student of history, and straightforward commentator of the Soviet Union and its autocracy who was practically without any help in charge of advising the West of the abhorrences of the Soviet Gulag.
Despite the fact that his work was for some time stifled in Russia – he was allowed to distribute just a single work there, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962) – he distributed numerous books in the West, most eminently his characterizing masterwork The Gulag Archipelago (1973). He was granted the Nobel Prize in Literature (1970) for "the moral power with which he has sought after the irreplaceable conventions of Russian writing."
Solzhenitsyn restricted socialism, be that as it may, yet in addition western popular government by and large and opportunity of the press specifically. He was generally a fundamentalist who looked to switch the spread of majority rule government and to restore the world to a pre-Renaissance state – and, as we will see, he likely was an enemy of Semite.