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Frumkin (Vladimir) papers
2016C46  
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  • Access
  • Use
  • Acquisition Information
  • Preferred Citation
  • Biographical Note
  • Scope and Content of Collection

  • Title: Vladimir Frumkin papers
    Date (inclusive): 1968-1994
    Collection Number: 2016C46
    Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives
    Language of Material: Russian
    Physical Description: 2 manuscript boxes (0.6 Linear Feet)
    Abstract: Correspondence and writings relating to the Soviet poet and singer Bulat Okudzhava.
    Creator: Frumkin, Vladimir
    Physical Location: Hoover Institution Library & Archives

    Access

    The collection is open for research; materials must be requested in advance via our reservation system. If there are audiovisual or digital media material in the collection, they must be reformatted before providing access.

    Use

    For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

    Acquisition Information

    Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 2016.

    Preferred Citation

    [Identification of item], Vladimir Frumkin papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives.

    Biographical Note

    Vladimir Frumkin was born in the USSR in 1929 and educated as a musician and musicologist. After emigrating from the Soviet Union in 1974, he established himself teaching Russian at Oberlin College. Later he wrote Pesni i vozhdi, a book about the complex relationship of the Soviet authorities to popular music.

    Scope and Content of Collection

    The focus of the Vladimir Frumkin papers is the life and work of Bulat Okudzhava, a major Soviet-era poet-singer who formed one of Frumkin's interests. Among the papers is an interview with Okudzhava, correspondence with him and about him with others, such as Gerald Stanton Smith, a University of Liverpool professor who studied and translated Okudzhava's poems and songs into English. The collection includes an autographed copy of a 1973 Samizdat edition of Okudzhava's songs and a recording of his 1994 concert in Detroit.
    In addition to the Okudzhava material, there is also important and substantive correspondence with other leading cultural dissidents: Naum Korzhavin, Efim Etkind (including his commentary on Alexander Solzhenitsyn), Aleksandr Nekrich, Felikhs Roziner, Leonid Rzhevskii, Leonid Glikman, Iuz Aleshkovskii, Lev Losev, Iurii Lotman, Mikhail Bialik, Boris Shragin, Anatolii Gladilin, Aleksandr Galich (including original typescripts of his writings), and other prominent writers, artists, musicians and scholars.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Music -- Soviet Union
    Soviet Union -- Civilization
    Okudzhava, Bulat, 1924-1997