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Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: Gulag Studies since the Archival Revolution
Part I. Identities
2. Religious Identity, Practice, and Hierarchy at the Solovetskii Camp of Forced Labor of Special Significance
3. Censoring the Mail in Stalin's Multiethnic Penal System: The Use of Languages Other Than Russian in Soviet Inmate Correspondence
4. "Who Are You in Life?": The Gulag Reputation System and Its Legacies Today
5. The Real Gulag: Commentary on the "Identities" Section
Part II. Sources
6. "They Won't Survive for Long": Soviet Officials on Medical Release Procedure
7. Applying Digital Methods to Forced Labor History: German POWs during and after the Second World War
8. Framing Gulag Memoirs: A Distant Reading
9. Researching the Gulag in the Era of "Big Data": Commentary on the "Sources" Section
Part III. Legacies
10. The Role of Nature in Gulag Poetry: Shalamov and Zabolotsky
11. "I Would Very Much Like to Read Your Story about Kolyma": Georgii Demidov, Varlam Shalamov, and the Development of Gulag Prose, 1965-67
12. The Necropolis of the Gulag as a Historical-Cultural Object: An Overview and Explication of the Problem
13. Sites and Sounds of the Camps: Commentary on the "Legacies" Section
14. Afterword / Alan Barenberg and Emily D. Johnson
Index.

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