Prisoners And Prisons In Varlam Shalamov's Kolyma Tales

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Political prisoners and criminals alike were subject to brutal conditions in the Soviet gulags at Kolyma in the 20th century. In Varlam Shalamov’s Kolyma Tales, the stories of many different prisoners are told and much is revealed about how humans react under these pressures, both naturally and socially. Being in an extreme environment not only takes a toll on one’s physical well-being, but on one’s mental and emotional state as well. The stories show that humans can be reduced to a fragile, animalistic state while in the Kolyma work camps because the extreme conditions force many men to focus solely on self-preservation.
A common theme in many of the stories is that of self-preservation, because for most of the prisoners, focusing one oneself …show more content…

Like an animal, the pleasure comes not from the taste, but from the sensation of satisfying even a little bit of that perpetual hunger. The prisoner Glebov in “In the Night” does not even care “whether [food] tasted good or not,” because he is only concerned with the sensation that accompanies the breadcrumbs he has swept off the table (11). The entire notion of eating is different in Kolyma, due entirely to the fact that the prisoners are plagued by an incessant hunger. In the story “Lend-Lease,” many of the prisoners are so desperate for something to satisfy their hunger that they eat the machine grease, claiming that it was butter sent as part of the Lend-Lease deal with the Americans. Eating the machine grease would put the prisoners at a new low from the point of view of an outsider, but they see themselves as victors, enjoying the grease left on their fingertips for the next few hours. The narrator in the story “Condensed Milk” mentions how hunger had “dulled and weakened” all of their feelings, especially envy (80). Their constant hunger took away all of their strength, and thus there was no strength left to feel any emotion. It is in this sense that the prisoners of these work camps are most like animals, where they no longer feel emotion like regular human beings but instead lack the ability to …show more content…

In “An Individual Assignment”, the prisoner Dugaev realizes that “cold, hunger, and sleeplessness rendered any friendship impossible” (22). He also understands that the foundations of friendship “had to be laid before living conditions reach that last border beyond which no human emotion was left to man” (22). These are the reasons that friendship, unless beneficial to both parties involved, is rare in Kolyma. If you are past the point where you are capable of human emotion, how is it possible to be a friend to someone? Prisoners’ actions are driven out of need, the need to relieve any small part of that cold, hunger, or tiredness. This goes to show that these men no longer know compassion, and that the only motive that might drive them to help someone else when subject to such extreme conditions is that if helping that person somehow benefits themselves as well. However, some of the stories show instances when friendship is possible, but that is only when conditions are bearable, such as in the hospital. In “Dominoes,” the narrator has a different type of relationship with Andrei Mihailovich, his doctor than he has with most of his other fellow prisoners. Though not quite yet a friendship, it is still a rarity among all of the stories, and the only reason that it is possible is because the narrator of the story is no longer under extreme conditions and is instead in the hospital. There, he

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