Mikhail Agursky
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Mikhail Samuilovich Agursky (Russian: Михаи́л Самуи́лович Агу́рский; 1933 – 21 August 1991), real name Melik Samuilovich Agursky (Russian: Мэ́лик Самуилович Агу́рский), was a Sovietology, Soviet cyberneticist[1] and historian of National Bolshevism.[2] Agursky was a member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences and Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Mikhail Agursky was the pen name of Melik Agursky. Other variations of the name are Melir (Russian: Мэлир) and Melib (Russian: Мэлиб).
He was the son of a famous revolutionary, a historian and party leader Samuel (Shmuel) Haimovich Agursky (1884-1947). In 1955 he married Vera Feodorovna Kondratieva.
Biography[]
Mikhail Agursky was born as Melik Samuilovich Agursky (Мэ́лик Самуилович Агу́рский) in Moscow in 1933 to a Jewish family. His father Samuel Agursky was revolutionary and historian.[3] Mikhail Agursky received an education in engineering and defended a dissertation on cybernetics.[4] In 1975 he emigrated to Israel.[5] Agursky became a Fellow of the Soviet and East European Research Center at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His book "The Ideology of National Bolshevism" was published in Paris in 1980.[6] On 21 August 1991 Agursky was found dead on in his hotel room in Moscow.[7]
References[]
- ^ Политический словарь: Агурский Михаил
- ^ Михаил Агурский. Идеология национал-большевизма Archived 2010-04-04 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Михаил Агурский - Биография
- ^ Заметки по еврейской истории: Михаил Агурский
- ^ Заметки по еврейской истории: Михаил Агурский
- ^ Mikhail Agursky (1933-1991)
- ^ Dr. Mikhail Agursky, Ex-Soviet Scientist
External links[]
- 1933 births
- 1991 deaths
- National Bolsheviks
- Russian Jews
- Soviet dissidents
- Soviet emigrants to Israel
- Cyberneticists
- Soviet literary historians
- Soviet male writers
- 20th-century male writers
- Soviet cyberneticists