Mark Azadovsky
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Mark Konstantinovich Azadovsky (Russian: Марк Константи́нович Азадо́вский; 18 December 1888 in Irkutsk – 24 November 1954 in Leningrad) was a Soviet and Russian scholar of folk-tales and Russian literature. As the head of the Folklore department at Leningrad State University during Stalin's anticosmopolitan campaigns of 1948-1953, he was denounced and fired along with Boris Eikhenbaum, Viktor Zhirmunsky, and Grigory Gukovsky. Their scholarly work was expunged from literary journals and their names erased from all indices, footnotes, and bibliographies. After his expulsion from Leningrad State University, Azadovsky began to suffer heart trouble, complications of which led to his death in 1954.[1]
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Categories:
- 1888 births
- 1954 deaths
- 20th-century Russian male writers
- People from Irkutsk
- People from Irkutsk Governorate
- Tomsk State University faculty
- Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
- Ethnographers of the Russian Empire
- Russian ethnographers
- Russian folklorists
- Russian literary historians
- Russian male writers
- Soviet ethnographers
- Soviet folklorists
- Soviet literary historians
- Soviet male writers
- Russian historian stubs