Zhores Medvedev

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Zhores Aleksandrovich Medvedev (Russian: Жорес Медведев) (born in Tbilisi, Georgia on November 14, 1925) is a Russian biologist, historian and dissident. His twin brother is the historian Roy Medvedev.

Contents

[edit] Biograhpy

[edit] Youth and education

Medvedev's first name is properly spelled Jaurès, as he was named for the French socialist leader.


[edit] Career and dissent

He is famous for exposing the nuclear disaster which occurred at Mayak near Kyshtym, Ozyorsk, Chelyabinsk Oblast in the Urals in 1957. He was one of the earliest victims of official attempts to stifle opposition by detaining dissidents in mental institutions. He was diagnosed as suffering from "sluggishly progressing schizophrenia" and was placed by force to psikhushka (i.e., Soviet psychiatric hospital) in 1970. Academicians Pyotr Kapitsa and Andrei Sakharov defended him. According to Sakharov, "Medvedev's work in two disparate fields - biology and political science - was regarded as evidence of a split personality...In fact, his detention was the Lysenkovites' revenge for his book attacking them." [1]

He was exiled in 1973 from the Soviet Union and now lives with his wife in London where he is a senior research scientist for the National Institute for Medical Research and now a specialist in gerontology.

He is the author of The Rise and Fall of T.D. Lysenko (1969), The Medvedev Papers (1971), Soviet Science (1978), and The Nuclear Disaster in the Urals (1979).

His twin brother Roy Medvedev is a historian, they coauthored Khrushchev: The Years in Power released in 1978. The brothers also wrote several other books.

He had two sons, one of whom is deceased. The other, Dimitri, ran the "Blue Bridge Café" in Camden, London, before moving to the West Country.

He is unrelated to current Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

[edit] Works

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Vadim J. Birstein. The Perversion Of Knowledge: The True Story of Soviet Science. Westview Press (2004) ISBN 0813342805