Abstract

The article focuses on the arrival of Igor Dedkov in Kostroma in September 1957. Being placed on a job at the editorial office of the regional newspaper Severnaya Pravda in a quiet provincial city, he worked in Kostroma for more than thirty years and returned to Moscow as a well-known and respected literary critic and journalist. The publication focuses on the fact that the first years of Igor Dedkov’s life and work were very difficult due to gradual adaptation to life in the Kostroma outland, which he later remembered very warmly and after a number of years even with frank admiration. But at that time (from September 1957 onwards) the situation for the young journalist was not easy at all. Unfortunately, in his diary published after his death, I. Dedkov referred to this stage of his biography only casually and without detail. Possibly, it can be accounted for by subsequent correction and radical change in I. Dedkov’s attitude to the province. The main purpose of this publication is to fill in this gap by introducing into scientific circulation a number of unpublished letters and other autobiographical materials which are currently stored in the I. Dedkov Interregional Scientific and Educational Center at Kostroma State University. The use of these and a number of other historiographical sources allowed us to clarify many important details in the life and work of the novice journalist of a regional newspaper, who left the capital for one of the provincial cities on his own initiative. The main methods used by the author of this article are the elements of system analysis, the method of historical reconstruction, induction and deduction. The use of these methods and the use of a previously unknown body of sources allowed the author of the article to significantly expand and deepen the existing (rather limited) ideas about the early period of I. Dedkov’s life and work, about the beginning of his formation as an original journalist and literary critic, who later entered the “great” literature.

Highlights

  • As a literary critic, Igor Dedkov wrote eight books, seven of which were published during his lifetime.1 The eighth book, considered as a kind of the critic’s testament, appeared after his death.2 In addition to books, I

  • The article focuses on the arrival of Igor Dedkov in Kostroma in September 1957

  • Being placed on a job at the editorial office of the regional newspaper Severnaya Pravda in a quiet provincial city, he worked in Kostroma for more than thirty years and returned to Moscow as a well-known and respected literary critic and journalist

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Summary

Introduction

Igor Dedkov wrote eight books, seven of which were published during his lifetime. The eighth book, considered as a kind of the critic’s testament, appeared after his death. In addition to books, I. N.V. Murenin (Kostroma: Kostromaizdat, 2005); T.F. Dedkova, comp., Igor Dedkov: our living time: a book of memoirs, articles and interviews [in Russian] (Moscow: MGU, 2013). “That year, long gone by” [in Russian], in Igor Dedkov: our living time: a book of memoirs, articles and interviews (Moscow: MGU, 2013), 164. The solution was found when Igor Dedkov found an opportunity to move away from the party and Komsomol issues and began to write reviews of films, plays, and books, and go on business trips around the region to study the life of the ordinary people and the events of the local socio-cultural reality His materials, even quite long ones, began to appear in the pages of the newspaper more and more often. This is the routine that I fear most.

Conclusion
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