Victor Serge
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Victor Serge ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; born Viktor Lvovich Kibalchich, Template:Langx; 30 December 1890 – 17 November 1947) was a Belgian-born Russian revolutionary, novelist, poet, historian, journalist, and translator.Template:Sfn Originally an anarchist, he joined the Bolsheviks in January 1919 after arriving in Petrograd (Saint Petersburg) at the height of the Russian Civil War.Template:Sfn He worked for the Comintern as a journalist, editor, and translatorTemplate:Sfn and was an early critic of the emerging Stalinist regime. Serge joined the Left Opposition in 1923Template:Sfn and was expelled from the Communist Party in late 1927 or early 1928.Template:Sfn He was imprisoned by the Soviet regime in 1928 and again from 1933 to 1936.Template:Sfn
Following an international campaign by prominent intellectuals, Serge was released from deportation in Orenburg and allowed to leave the Soviet Union in April 1936.Template:Sfn During his subsequent exiles in France and Mexico, he continued to write extensively, producing critical analyses of the Soviet Union, several acclaimed novels depicting the lives of revolutionaries and the psychological toll of political struggle, and historical works. His most notable works include the novel The Case of Comrade Tulayev, his historical account Year One of the Russian Revolution, and his Memoirs of a Revolutionary, 1901–1941.Template:Sfn
Serge was a key eyewitness to and participant in the revolutionary movements of the early 20th century. His writings offer a unique perspective on the Russian Revolution, its degeneration into totalitarianism, and the broader struggles against fascism and authoritarianism.Template:Sfn After decades of relative obscurity, interest in Serge's work experienced a significant revival towards the end of the 20th century and into the 21st, with many of his books being republished.Template:Sfn He is remembered for his unwavering commitment to socialist ideals, his defense of individual freedom and critical thought, and his powerful literary testimonies to the "unforgettable times" he lived through.Template:Sfn
Early life and political beginningsEdit
Viktor Lvovich Kibalchich was born on 30 December 1890, in Brussels, Belgium, to impoverished Russian émigré intellectuals.Template:Sfn His parents were Narodnik sympathizers who had fled Russia after the assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881, a plot in which a relative, Nikolai Kibalchich, a chemist, played a key technical role and was subsequently executed.Template:Sfn Victor Kibalchich did not adopt the name "Victor Serge" until 1917, when he began writing for Tierra y Libertad in Spain.Template:Sfn
In his youth, Serge joined the Belgian Young Socialists but soon became disgusted with their electoralism and opportunism.Template:Sfn He turned to anarchism, moving to Paris in 1909.Template:Sfn There, he associated with anarcho-individualist and illegalist circles, became a writer and editor for the journal L'Anarchie under the pen name Le Rétif (The Stubborn One), and was implicated with the Bonnot Gang.Template:Sfn Although he did not participate in the gang's expropriations, he defended the principle of individual expropriation.Template:Sfn Refusing to denounce his comrades, Serge was sentenced to five years of solitary confinement in 1913 for his association with the group.Template:Sfn This experience formed the basis of his first novel, Men in Prison.Template:Sfn
Released in January 1917, Serge was expelled from France and went to Barcelona, Spain.Template:Sfn There, he joined the CNT, participated in the syndicalist uprising of July 1917, and wrote for Tierra y Libertad.Template:Sfn Disillusioned with anarchism's inability to confront the question of power and drawn by the Russian Revolution, he decided to go to Russia.Template:Sfn He attempted to reach Russia via France but was arrested in October 1917 for violating his expulsion order and interned as a "Bolshevik suspect" in a French concentration camp at Precigne for fifteen months.Template:Sfn In the camp, he studied Marxism with other Russian revolutionaries.Template:Sfn
Russian Revolution and CominternEdit
Arrival in Russia and joining the BolsheviksEdit
Serge was exchanged for French military officers held by the Russians and arrived in Petrograd in January 1919.Template:Sfn He was immediately struck by the harsh realities of the Civil War, famine, and the Red Terror, as well as the Bolsheviks' authoritarian measures.Template:Sfn An article by Grigory Zinoviev on "The Monopoly of Power" shocked him, raising concerns about the suppression of democratic liberties.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, Serge believed Bolshevism was necessary for the survival of the revolution and joined the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) in May 1919.Template:Sfn
Work in the Comintern and Civil WarEdit
Serge was quickly put to work in the newly formed Communist International (Comintern), leveraging his linguistic skills and European revolutionary experience.Template:Sfn He worked with Zinoviev, then President of the Comintern, and Vladimir Mazin to establish the Comintern's administration.Template:Sfn He ran the Romance-language section, edited publications, translated, and met foreign delegates.Template:Sfn During the Civil War, Serge participated in the defense of Petrograd, served as a trooper in a Communist battalion, engaged in smuggling arms, and became a commissar in charge of the archives of the former Tsarist secret police, the Okhrana.Template:Sfn His experiences with the Okhrana archives led to his book What Everyone Should Know about State Repression.Template:Sfn
Early critiques and KronstadtEdit
While committed to the Bolshevik cause, Serge was critical of their authoritarian practices from early on.Template:Sfn He objected to the "stultifying structures" and the rise of bureaucracy.Template:Sfn The suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion in March 1921 was a particularly distressing event for Serge.Template:Sfn He believed the Bolsheviks could have reached a compromise with the sailors, whose demands often mirrored earlier Bolshevik ideals, but that the Party panicked.Template:Sfn Serge was horrified by the Party's lies surrounding the event, considering it a "watershed for the Revolution and its ideals".Template:Sfn Despite his anguish, he ultimately sided with the Party, believing the alternative was counter-revolution.Template:Sfn
The introduction of the New Economic Policy (NEP) in 1921 dismayed Serge, who saw it as a retreat towards capitalism.Template:Sfn He proposed an alternative, a "communism of associations", based on worker-controlled cooperatives and democratic planning from below, but this found little traction.Template:Sfn Disillusioned by the growing bureaucratization and the compromises of NEP, Serge and some French Communist friends attempted to establish an agricultural commune, "Novaya-Ladoga", in late 1921, but it failed due to local hostility and hardship.Template:Sfn
Germany, Vienna, and the Left OppositionEdit
In late 1921 or early 1922, Serge accepted a Comintern assignment in Berlin.Template:Sfn He was tasked with editing the French edition of the Comintern journal International Press Correspondence (Inprekorr, or La Correspondance Internationale, LCI).Template:Sfn He witnessed firsthand the economic and social decay of Weimar Germany, the rampant inflation, and the political polarization.Template:Sfn He was critical of the Comintern's often misinformed and bureaucratic handling of the German revolutionary situation, particularly during the failed "German October" of 1923.Template:Sfn
During a trip to Moscow at the end of 1922 or in June 1923 for a Comintern Executive meeting, Serge was surprised by the relative prosperity brought by NEP but alarmed by the growing corruption and social disparities.Template:Sfn He noted the degeneration within the Comintern itself.Template:Sfn
From late 1923 to 1925, Serge was based in Vienna, continuing his Comintern work.Template:Sfn Vienna had become a crossroads for international revolutionaries, and Serge associated with figures like Georg Lukács, Antonio Gramsci, and Adolf Joffe.Template:Sfn It was during this period in Vienna, in 1923, that Serge formally joined the Left Opposition, which was coalescing around Leon Trotsky in the Soviet Union to resist the bureaucratization of the Party and advocate for a policy of industrialization and workers' democracy.Template:Sfn After Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924, Serge wrote Lenin 1917, a study that, while seemingly an official tribute, implicitly criticized the emerging Stalinist leadership by emphasizing Lenin's internationalism and reliance on mass democracy.Template:Sfn
Return to the USSR and anti-Stalinist struggleEdit
Serge returned to the Soviet Union in 1925, intending to actively participate in the Left Opposition.Template:Sfn He found a society in moral crisis under NEP, with widespread disillusionment and the rise of a new privileged stratum.Template:Sfn He became a leading figure in the Leningrad Opposition, working closely with Trotsky's supporters like Alexandra Bronstein.Template:Sfn The Opposition advocated for a program of industrialization, revitalization of Soviet democracy, and a commitment to international revolution, opposing Joseph Stalin's theory of "Socialism in One Country".Template:Sfn
The internal Party struggle intensified, with Stalin, Zinoviev, and Lev Kamenev (the "Troika") launching a campaign against Trotsky and Trotskyism.Template:Sfn After the Troika split in 1925, Zinoviev and Kamenev briefly formed the United Opposition with Trotsky in 1926.Template:Sfn Serge was involved in unifying the Leningrad Trotskyist and Zinovievist groups.Template:Sfn Despite their efforts, the Opposition was systematically silenced, their members harassed, and their platform suppressed.Template:Sfn Serge was expelled from the Communist Party just after the Fifteenth Party Congress in December 1927, which also expelled the leading figures of the United Opposition.Template:Sfn He was arrested in March 1928 and imprisoned for seven to eight weeks.Template:Sfn
Stalinization and "Years of Resistance"Edit
After his release from prison in 1928, Serge, now politically silenced within the USSR, turned to "serious writing" as a means of resistance and testimony.Template:Sfn He had suffered a near-fatal intestinal occlusion, which, combined with his political "death", led him to dedicate the rest of his life to chronicling the "unforgettable times".Template:Sfn In the following five years of precarious liberty, he produced a remarkable body of work, including the novels Men in Prison and Birth of Our Power, and the historical work Year One of the Russian Revolution.Template:Sfn His works were published abroad but boycotted in the Soviet Union and often ignored or criticized by both the mainstream Western press and the official Communist left.Template:Sfn
Serge was a firsthand witness to the brutal processes of forced collectivization and crash industrialization initiated by Stalin in 1928–29.Template:Sfn He documented the ensuing grain crisis, the war against the peasantry (dekulakization), the mass deportations, and the devastating famine of 1932–33.Template:Sfn His analysis, articulated in works like Soviets 1929 (published under Panaït Istrati's name) and later in Russia Twenty Years After, traced these policies to Stalin's bureaucratic response to the failures of NEP and the regime's determination to maintain power at any cost.Template:Sfn He also chronicled the wave of show trials against "specialists" and former oppositionists, recognizing them as a means to find scapegoats for the regime's failures and consolidate Stalin's totalitarian control.Template:Sfn
Deportation to OrenburgEdit
In March 1933, Serge was arrested again by the GPU (Soviet secret police).Template:Sfn After 85 days of solitary confinement and interrogation in the Lubyanka, he was condemned without trial to three years of deportation in Orenburg, a remote city in the Ural region, for "counter-revolutionary conspiracy".Template:Sfn His apolitical sister-in-law, Anita Russakova, was falsely implicated in his case through a fabricated confession.Template:Sfn
Life in Orenburg was marked by extreme hardship, famine, and constant surveillance.Template:Sfn Serge, along with his son Vlady who joined him in 1934, endured near starvation. His wife Liuba's mental health deteriorated under the strain.Template:Sfn Despite the conditions, Serge continued to write, producing four books: the novels Les Hommes perdus (about pre-war French anarchists) and La Tourmente (a sequel to Conquered City), a collection of poems titled Résistance, and work on Year Two of the Russian Revolution.Template:Sfn
Meanwhile, an international campaign for Serge's release was launched by his friends in Paris, including Magdeleine Paz and Jacques Mesnil.Template:Sfn The "Victor Serge Affair" gained prominence, particularly at the 1935 International Congress of Writers for the Defence of Culture in Paris, where prominent figures like André Malraux and André Gide were pressed to intervene.Template:Sfn Romain Rolland eventually raised Serge's case directly with Stalin during a visit to Moscow in 1935.Template:Sfn
In April 1936, Serge was unexpectedly granted permission to leave the Soviet Union.Template:Sfn However, his manuscripts were confiscated by the GPU upon his departure, a loss he deeply lamented.Template:Sfn
Exile in EuropeEdit
Serge arrived in Brussels, Belgium, in April 1936, then moved to Paris.Template:Sfn He was immediately stripped of his Soviet nationality and faced continued harassment from GPU agents and the Communist press, which libeled him as a "common criminal" and an agent of Trotsky.Template:Sfn He threw himself into exposing the Moscow Trials, writing pamphlets like Sixteen Executed: Where is the Revolution Going? and From Lenin to Stalin, and the more extensive analysis Destiny of a Revolution (published in English as Russia Twenty Years After).Template:Sfn
During this period (1936–1938), Serge engaged in an intense correspondence with Leon Trotsky, then in Norway and later Mexico.Template:Sfn They collaborated on refuting the Moscow Trial charges and analyzing Soviet developments. However, significant political differences emerged, particularly over the Spanish Civil War (Serge supported the POUM, which Trotsky criticized), the Kronstadt issue (which Serge insisted on re-examining publicly), and the formation of the Fourth International (which Serge viewed as premature and sectarian).Template:Sfn These disagreements led to a bitter polemical exchange and a rupture in their relationship by 1939, though Serge always maintained a deep respect for Trotsky's historical role and intellectual contributions.Template:Sfn
Serge was deeply involved in assisting anti-Stalinist and anti-fascist refugees in Paris. The GPU's assassination campaign extended into Europe, claiming victims like Ignace Reiss and Leon Sedov, Trotsky's son, whose deaths Serge investigated and publicized.Template:Sfn
Final exile in MexicoEdit
Flight from EuropeEdit
With the fall of France in June 1940, Serge, accompanied by his son Vlady and his companion Laurette Séjourné, fled Paris.Template:Sfn After a perilous journey, they reached Marseille, which had become a temporary refuge for thousands of anti-fascist intellectuals and political militants seeking to escape Europe.Template:Sfn Serge worked with Varian Fry and the Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC), living for a time at the Villa Air-Bel, a haven for endangered artists and writers.Template:Sfn Obtaining visas was an arduous process, hampered by bureaucratic obstacles and political suspicions.Template:Sfn After six harrowing months, Serge and Vlady finally secured passage on a freighter, the Capitaine Paul Lemerle, in March 1941.Template:Sfn Their journey involved detentions in Martinique (where they were briefly jailed) and the Dominican Republic before they finally arrived in Mexico in September 1941.Template:Sfn Laurette Séjourné and Serge's young daughter, Jeannine (born in Orenburg in 1935), joined them in Mexico in March 1942.Template:Sfn
Life and work in MexicoEdit
In Mexico City, Serge faced continued poverty, political isolation, and difficulties in publishing his work.Template:Sfn He was slandered by the local Communist press and GPU agents as a Nazi sympathizer and "fifth columnist".Template:Sfn He associated with other European exiles, including members of the POUM and independent socialists, forming the discussion group "Socialismo y Libertad", which published the journals Mundo and Analysis.Template:Sfn
Despite the hardships, Serge's final years in Mexico were a period of intense literary and political reflection.Template:Sfn He completed some of his most important works, including his Memoirs of a Revolutionary, 1901–1941, the novels The Case of Comrade Tulayev and The Long Dusk (published in English as Unforgiving Years), and kept a voluminous journal (Carnets).Template:Sfn He wrote extensively on the nature of World War II, the future of socialism, the Soviet system, and the rise of totalitarianism.Template:Sfn
Later political thoughtEdit
In his final writings, Serge grappled with the profound crisis of socialism in the wake of Stalinism and fascism. He analyzed the Soviet Union as a form of "bureaucratic totalitarianism with collectivist leanings", distinct from both capitalism and traditional socialism.Template:Sfn He saw similar "collectivist tendencies" in Nazi Germany and even in aspects of the New Deal, fearing the rise of new, undemocratic social formations managed by technocratic elites.Template:Sfn
Serge called for a fundamental renewal of socialist thought, emphasizing the "defence of man", "defence of truth", and "defence of thought" as essential preconditions for any genuine socialist project.Template:Sfn He stressed the need for socialist movements to integrate democratic principles and individual liberties, warning against the dangers of authoritarianism, sectarianism, and dogmatism.Template:Sfn He maintained a deep, albeit critical, adherence to Marxism, arguing for its humanistic core and its relevance for understanding and transforming the world.Template:Sfn His concept of the "sense of history"—a conscious participation in the collective human endeavor for a better future—remained a central theme.Template:Sfn
DeathEdit
Victor Serge died of a heart attack in Mexico City on 17 November 1947.Template:Sfn He was impoverished, his clothes threadbare.Template:Sfn Some of his associates, including his son Vlady, suspected he might have been poisoned by GPU agents, as the circumstances of his death while hailing a taxi were somewhat unclear, though no definitive proof has emerged.Template:Sfn He was buried in the Spanish section of the Panteón Francés cemetery in Mexico City.Template:Sfn
Literary worksEdit
Victor Serge's literary output was prodigious, encompassing novels, historical works, political essays, poetry, and memoirs. He turned to "serious writing" as a novelist in 1928 after his first Soviet imprisonment, viewing literature as a means of testimony and a way to explore the human dimensions of revolutionary struggle and defeat.Template:Sfn According to William Giraldi, Serge's novels may be "read like an alloy of" George Orwell and Franz Kafka: "the uncommon political acuity of Orwell and the absurdist comedy of Kafka, a comedy with the damning squint of satire, except the satire is real."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In his studies of Serge, Richard Greeman described him as a Modernist writer influenced by James Joyce, Andrei Bely and Freud; Greeman also believed that Serge, although writing in French, continued the experiments of such Russian Soviet writers as Isaac Babel, Osip Mandelstam, and Boris Pilnyak, and poets Vladimir Mayakovsky and Sergei Yesenin.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
His novels, such as Men in Prison (1930), Birth of Our Power (1931), Conquered City (1932), Midnight in the Century (1939), The Case of Comrade Tulayev (1948), and Unforgiving Years (published posthumously), are deeply informed by his personal experiences as an anarchist, Bolshevik, oppositionist, prisoner, and exile.Template:Sfn They often depict the moral dilemmas, psychological pressures, and human tragedies faced by individuals caught in the maelstrom of historical events. Weissman notes Serge's style often involved portraying great historical events where the actions of the masses, rather than single characters, drove the plot.Template:Sfn Nicholas Lezard calls The Case of Comrade Tulayev "one of the great 20th-century Russian novels" that follows the traditions of "Gogolian absurdity".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
His historical and political works, including Year One of the Russian Revolution (1930), From Lenin to Stalin (1937), and Russia Twenty Years After (1937, originally Destiny of a Revolution), offer partisan yet scholarly analyses of the Russian Revolution and its subsequent degeneration.Template:Sfn His Memoirs of a Revolutionary (1951) is considered a classic of 20th-century political autobiography.Template:Sfn
LegacyEdit
Victor Serge's life and work were largely marginalized during the Cold War, caught between the anathemas of Stalinism and Western anti-communism.Template:Sfn However, beginning in the late 20th century, there has been a significant revival of interest in his writings.Template:Sfn Many of his books have been republished and translated into multiple languages, and his work is increasingly recognized for its literary merit and its profound insights into the political and moral crises of the 20th century.Template:Sfn
He is valued as an incorruptible witness to the revolutionary upheavals and totalitarian tragedies of his time.Template:Sfn His consistent defense of human freedom, his critique of all forms of oppression, and his efforts to forge a democratic, libertarian socialism continue to resonate with contemporary readers and activists.Template:Sfn As Susan Weissman notes, Serge "belongs to our future" due to his unwavering commitment to a society that "defends human freedom, enhances human dignity and improves the human condition".Template:Sfn Despite the defeats he witnessed, a persistent theme in Serge's work was that "the course is set on hope".Template:Sfn
Works available in EnglishEdit
FictionEdit
- The Long Dusk (1946) Translator: Ralph Manheim; New York : The Dial Press. Translation of Les derniers temps, Montreal 1946.
- The Case of Comrade Tulayev (1967) Translator: Willard R. Trask; New York : New York Review of Books Classics. Translation of L'Affaire Toulaev. Paris 1949.
- Birth of our Power (1967) Translator: Richard Greeman; New York : Doubleday. Translation of Naissance de notre force, Paris 1931.
- Men in Prison (1969) Translator: Richard Greeman; Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Translation of Les hommes dans le prison, Paris 1930.
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- Template:Cite book (revised edition of The Long Dusk)
PoemsEdit
- Resistance (1989) Translator: James Brooks; San Francisco: City Lights. Translation of Résistance, Paris 1938.
- A Blaze in the Desert: Selected Poems by Victor Serge, translated by James Brook PM Press, Oakland, California, 2017.
Non-fiction: booksEdit
- From Lenin to Stalin (1937) Translator: Ralph Manheim; New York: Pioneer Publishers. Translation of De Lénine à Staline, Paris 1937.
- Russia Twenty Years After (1937) Translator: Max Shachtman; New York: Pioneer Publishers. Translation of Destin d'une révolution, Paris 1937. Also published as Destiny of a Revolution.
- Memoirs of a Revolutionary, 1901–1941 (2012) Translator: Peter Sedgwick with George Paizis; New York: New York Review of Books Classics. Translation of Mémoires d'un révolutionnaire, 1901–1941, Paris 1951.
- Year One of the Russian Revolution (1972) Translator: Peter Sedgwick; London: Allen Lane. Translation of L'An 1 de la révolution russe, Paris 1930.
- The Life and Death of Leon Trotsky (1973) (with Natalia Sedova Trotsky) Translator: Arnold J. Pomerans; Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Translation of: Vie et mort de Leon Trotsky, Paris 1951.
- What Everyone Should Know About State Repression (1979) Translator: Judith White; London: New Park Publications. Translation of Les Coulisses d'une Sûreté générale. Ce que tout révolutionnaire devrait savoir sur la répression, Paris 1926.
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Non-fiction: collections of essays and articlesEdit
- The Century of the Unexpected – Essays on Revolution and Counter-Revolution (1994) Editor: Al Richardson; special issue of Revolutionary History, Vol.5 No.3.
- The Serge-Trotsky Papers (1994) Editor: D.J. Cotterill; London: Pluto.
- Revolution in Danger – Writings from Russia 1919–1921 (1997) Translator: Ian Birchall; London: Redwords.
- The Ideas of Victor Serge: A Life as a Work of Art (1997), Edited by Susan Weissman, London: Merlin Press.
- Witness to the German Revolution (2000) Translator: Ian Birchall; London: Redwords.
- Collected Writings on Literature and Revolution (2004) Translator and editor: Al Richardson; London: Francis Boutle.
Non-fiction: pamphletEdit
- Kronstadt '21 (1975) Translator: not named; London: Solidarity.
Sources: British Library Catalogue and Catalog of the Library of Congress.
See alsoEdit
- Anarchism in France
- Anti-Stalinist left
- Transatlantic (portrayal in 2023 TV series)
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
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- Adam Hochschild Finding the Trapdoor: Essays, Portraits, Travels (Syracuse University Press, 1997), "Two Russians," pp. 65–87.
Further readingEdit
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External linksEdit
- Victor Serge Internet Archive in the Marxists Internet Archive
- Bulletin of the Russian Opposition: "Victor Serge and the IVth International". Statement criticising Serge by the editors of the Bulletin of the Russian Opposition, writing in Quatrième Internationale, April 1939. Source: Victor Serge & Leon Trotsky, La Lutte Contre le Stalinisme. Maspero, Paris, 1977. Translated for Marxist Internet Archive by Mitch Abidor in 2005. Retrieved 28 April 2005.
- Victor Serge Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
- An essay on Serge by Ben Lerner in The New York Review of Books