Nadezhda Joffe: Difference between revisions
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| NAME = Joffe, Nadezhda |
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| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Soviet writer |
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| DATE OF BIRTH = 1906 |
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| DATE OF DEATH = March 18, 1999 |
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[[Category:1906 births]] |
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Revision as of 06:30, 22 February 2016
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (January 2013) |
Nadezhda Adolfovna Joffe (Template:Lang-ru) (1906 – March 18, 1999) was a Soviet Trotskyist and daughter of early Soviet leader Adolph Joffe.
Joffe joined the Trotskyist Left Opposition within the Soviet Communist Party shortly after it was formed in 1923 and was first exiled from Moscow in 1929. She was re-arrested at the beginning of the Great Purge in 1936 and sent to Kolyma labor camps in Siberia, where her first husband, Trotskyist Pavel Kossakovsky, was killed in 1938. She was the last person to see Leon Trotsky's first wife, Aleksandra Sokolovskaya, alive in Kolyma in 1938.
After Joseph Stalin's death in 1953, Joffe's sentence was annulled and she returned to Moscow in 1956. She wrote a book of memoirs, Back in Time: My Life, My Fate, My Epoch in 1971-1972, which was first published in Moscow after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1992. Her family emigrated to the United States at the end of her life and she settled in Brooklyn, New York City. She worked on her father's biography and his letters until her death in 1999 at the age of 92, collaborating with Iskra Research publishing house.
References
- Nadezhda Joffe. Back in Time: My Life, My Fate, My Epoch, Oak Park, MI, Labor Publications, 1995, ISBN 0-929087-70-4 (translated from the Russian by Frederick S. Choate) Original Russian title Vremya Nazad
- Nadezhda Joffe. On Trotsky's Romances, Real and Imagined, a letter published in Novoye Russkoye Slovo, March 18, 1997
- Helen Halyard. Nadezhda Joffe 1906 - 1999. Obituary in Workers' Liberty #57, 1999.
- 1906 births
- 1999 deaths
- American women writers
- Communist Party of the Soviet Union rank-and-file
- Expelled members of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
- American people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Russian Jews
- Russian memoirists
- Russian Trotskyists
- Russian women writers
- Soviet women writers
- Soviet rehabilitations
- Soviet dissidents
- Soviet Jews
- Women memoirists
- 20th-century women writers
- Communist women writers