The persistence of the Lie

Our own Daniel J. Mahoney has authored a new reflection on the continuing imperative not to live by lies.

As Solzhenitsyn has indisputably established, the ideological Lie deceives at a very fundamental level. Those who perceive themselves as “innocent victims,” bereft of sin and any capacity for wrongdoing, or as agents of historical “progress,” become puffed up with hubris and feel themselves to be infallible. They become oppressors with little or no sense of limits or moral restraint. In Albert Camus’s memorable words, we must instead aim to be “neither victims nor executioners.” That is the path of moral sanity and political decency recommended by both the Christian Solzhenitsyn and the unbelieving Camus.
— Daniel J. Mahoney

Just published: No. 8 of "Studying Solzhenitsyn"

In what has become an important biennial literary event, the latest (8th) issue of Studying Solzhenitsyn is out.

Studying Solzhenitsyn, No. 8 (2021)   336 pp.
This issue presents, for the first time, Solzhenitsyn’s recollections of his young adulthood, as well as a number of his private letters; materials from the Soviet government’s 1974 criminal case against the author; and other documents from the Russian State Archives. Sections detailing current goings-on in the Solzhenitsyn space include information on important recent editions of the writer’s works, new research publications and study aids, exhibits, conferences, and on the latest (2020) award of the Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Prize in Literature. The issue is rounded out by reproductions of handwritten manuscripts and by photographs.

Contents & Summary (English)