Abstract:
The existence of “Russian Berlin” in the history of the twentieth
century emigration is a special phenomenon. In the 1920s after the
Russian Civil War, thousands of émigrés fled to Berlin . V.Shklovsky
called the Russian émigrés “refugees” with which he stressed the
feeling of confusion many émigrés had. Some of them dreamed of
returning to their native land but a large majority would have liked to
see the collapse of the Bolshevik and anticipated it.” (Андреев, А : 36).
Victor Shklovsky (1893-1984) is well-known as literary critic, novelist
and leading figure of Russian formalism. Publication Victor Shklovsky’s
“Sentimental Journey” - this interesting example of autobiographical
prose in Berlin, In 1923, (Publishing house “Gelikon”), was
followed by a broad response in émigré periodical press and at the
same time it became a rarity. This is a book written step by step of political
events which supplies us with interesting material on Russian
emigration. Shklovsky describes impressions of the events that he
witnessed in 1918-23, his undergraduate activities against Bolsheviks,
his creative life at the Petrograd House of Arts-founded by M.Gorky
and K.Chukovsky in 1919.