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A scandal in letters: Nina Berberova and the Nazi occupation of France

Frank, Siggy

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Authors

SIGGY FRANK SIGGY.FRANK@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Associate Professor



Abstract

© 2018 The Russian Review. This article focuses on the scandal around the Russian émigré writer Nina Berberova in post-war France, when she was accused of having been a Nazi sympathizer and collaborator. Rumours about her alleged Nazi collaboration during the German occupation of France started emerging from 1941 onwards and proliferated after the liberation of Paris in a complex exchange of letters between writers, journalists and political figures of the Russian emigration in France and the United States. In September 1945, Berberova defended herself against these allegations in an open letter to leading figures of the Russian émigré establishment. Yet, rather than putting the matter to rest, this public declaration of innocence only fuelled intense discussions among Russian émigré writers in the autumn of 1945 about Berberova’s role during the Nazi occupation of France. Berberova was by no means the only Russian émigré writer accused of collaboration with the Nazis, but she commanded a disproportionally large amount of space in the correspondence of the literary and cultural elite during and after the Second World War. Berberova ascribed the accusations of Nazi collaboration to personal “jalousie,” yet the distinctly public nature of the discourse about her suggests that her alleged transgressions had a wider symbolic significance for the Russian intellectual emigration. In this article, I argue that the Berberova scandal was a symptom of the deepening fault lines between Russian and Russian-Jewish writers in the Russian émigré community in post-war France. While émigré discourse tended to ignore this emerging rift or the distinct identities and divergent experience of Russian-Jewish writers during the German occupation, the Berberova scandal marks a moment in émigré history when a small group of influential intellectuals tried to put the suffering of Russian-Jewish writers during the war years and the covert anti-Semitism in parts of the Russian emigration on the agenda. To this end, Berberova came to stand in for those Russian émigré writers who were seen to have been indifferent to the suffering of their Russian-Jewish colleagues during the occupation. This article therefore looks beyond the issue of Berberova’s guilt or innocence and instead examines the function of the scandal and its underlying ideological conflicts within the complex process by which the Russian emigration negotiated its own demise as a culturally distinct group with a shared purpose during and after the Second World War.

Citation

Frank, S. (2018). A scandal in letters: Nina Berberova and the Nazi occupation of France. Russian Review, 77(4), 602-620. https://doi.org/10.1111/russ.12182

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 6, 2018
Online Publication Date Sep 4, 2018
Publication Date Oct 1, 2018
Deposit Date Jun 26, 2018
Publicly Available Date Sep 5, 2020
Journal Russian Review
Print ISSN 0036-0341
Electronic ISSN 0036-0341
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 77
Issue 4
Pages 602-620
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/russ.12182
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/931128
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/russ.12182

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