Walter Duranty

Walter Duranty won a Pulitzer Prize in 1932 for a set of stories he wrote in 1931 as The New York Times' Moscow correspondent, covering Joseph Stalin's Five-Year Plan to industrialize the Soviet Union. Duranty, who died in 1957, enjoyed a lavish lifestyle during his 12 years in Moscow, and is widely seen as an apologist for Joseph Stalin. He is the subject of a 1990 biography called "Stalin's Apologist. The New York Times hired a professor of Russian history to review Duranty's work. That professor, Mark Von Hagen of Columbia University, says Mr. Duranty's reports were unbalanced and uncritical, and they far too often gave voice to Stalinist propaganda. In his New York Times articles, Duranty repeatedly denied the existence of the 1932 Ukrainian famine that is estimated to have killed between five million and 10 million Ukrainians, even though he knew of its existence. Because of this, several organizations have called on the Pulitzer Board to revoke his prize, but no action has been taken.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
radial arm saw
dwane
dodge shadow
adult industry medical health care foundation
list of asteroids named after people
small c conservative
list of famous drug smugglers
billy goodman
steel panthers
insomnia (novel)
cooper, iowa
mt lb
josiah
lenya
russification of finland
nivr
alexander mccall smith
serc
chantal mouffe
transliterating cuneiform languages
erwin griswold
scandza
london monarchs
gareth edwards
tracy
flying scot (dinghy)
david jenkinson
boubacar boris diop
drury university
necessary and proper clause
bishop (android)
hood method
berlin thunder
1932 pulitzer prize
sher bahadur deuba
desh
pentazona barb
edward ardizzone
black ruby barb
capites da areia
uktv
strathclyde passenger transport
terras do sem fim
so jorge dos ilhus