Leonard Schapiro Explained

Leonard Schapiro
Birth Date:22 April 1908
Birth Place:Glasgow
Death Date:2 November 1983
Death Place:London
Body Discovered:Institute for the Study of Conflict
Citizenship:British
Known For:Historian
Occupation:Academic
Boards:
Parents:Max Schapiro, Leah Levine

Leonard Bertram Naman Schapiro (22 April 1908 in Glasgow  - 2 November 1983 in London) was the leading British scholar of the origins and development of the Soviet political system. He taught for many years at the London School of Economics, where he was Professor of Political Science with Special Reference to Russian Studies. Schapiro was best known for his magisterial study, The Communist Party of the Soviet Union, though his early work on the rise to power of the Bolshevik Party, The Origins of the Communist Autocracy, was his most intellectually ambitious and innovative contribution to the field of Soviet studies.  Because of his prominence in the field and his insistence on viewing the USSR through a normative lens, Schapiro accumulated his share of detractors, including those who were uncomfortable with his embrace of totalitarianism as a descriptor of Soviet rule and those who alleged that his reputed ties to British intelligence services made him little more than a political propagandist.

Schapiro was of Russian-Jewish background; his father, Max, was the University of Glasgow-educated son of a wealthy businessman who owned a timber mill and forests outside Riga, Latvia; his mother, Leah, was a Polish rabbi's daughter.[1] Born in Glasgow, he was taken to Russia and spent some of his childhood in Riga (his father having taken over the family timber business) and St. Petersburg, when his father took a position in railway administration.[2] He returned to Britain with his parents in 1920 and completed his education in London, at St Paul's School, then at University College, London. He was called to the Bar from Gray's Inn in 1932, returning to the law after the Second World War until 1955. His fluency in Russian, German, French and Italian led him to work for the B.B.C.'s Monitoring Service in 1940; in 1942 he joined the General Staff at the War Office, and from 1945 to 1946 served in the Intelligence Division of the German Control Command, reaching the rank of lieutenant-colonel.[3] [4] Schapiro's traditional liberalism alienated him from those scholars more sympathetic to the goals, if not the means, of Soviet socialism, such as E. H. Carr.

A scholar with interests that ranged well beyond political history, Schapiro was the author of an authoritative biography of Ivan Turgenev,[5] as well as the translator into English of Turgenev's novel Spring Torrents. After his death, some of his articles on liberalism, Marxism, and literature appeared in the volume Russian Studies.[6] He had married firstly, in 1943, Isabel de Madariaga, an historian of eighteenth century Russia;[7] following their 1976 divorce, he married editor Roma Thewes.[8]

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References

Notes and References

  1. Leonard Bertram Schapiro (1908-1983): An Intellectual Memoir, Peter Reddaway, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1984, p. 1
  2. Leonard Bertram Schapiro (1908-1983): An Intellectual Memoir, Peter Reddaway, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1984, pp. 1-2
  3. Leonard Bertram Schapiro (1908-1983): An Intellectual Memoir, Peter Reddaway, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1984, pp. 3-4
  4. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 10.1093/ref:odnb/31658. 2004.
  5. Leonard Schapiro, Turgenev: His Life and Times, Harvard University Press, 1982
  6. Russian Studies: Leonard Schapiro, ed. Ellen Dahrendorf, Penguin 1986.
  7. News: Isabel de Madariaga obituary. The Guardian. 2014-07-15. Scott. Hamish.
  8. Leonard Bertram Schapiro (1908-1983): An Intellectual Memoir, Peter Reddaway, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, 1984, p. 30