Life and literary work
He was born on December 6, 1913 in Durasovka village (now Sukharevka). His father, Pavel Ivanovich Zalygin, came from a peasant family of the Tambov Province, studied at the University of Kiev, from which he was expelled and exiled to the Ufa Province for revolutionary activity. Zalygin's mother, Lyubov Timofeevna Zalygina (Abkin), was a daughter of a bank employee from the town of Krasny Kholm, Tver Province. She studied at the Women's Higher Courses in Saint Petersburg. His childhood was spent in the Ural mountains, at the Satka factory. In 1920, the family moved to Barnaul (in Western Siberia), where he graduated from a seven-year school, and, later, the Barnaul Agricultural College. He worked as an agronomist in the Tashtypsky district farm union of Khakassia in 1931, where he witnessed the tragic events of collectivization. In 1933–1939, Zalygin studied at the Omsk State Agrarian Institute at the Department of Irrigation and Reclamation. While a student he was influenced by the works of Russian geographer and meteorologist A. I. Voeykov and V. I. Vernadsky. During World War II, he worked as an engineer-hydrologist at the Salekhard Hydrometeorological Station in the Siberian Military District. After his demobilization, Zalygin returned to the Department of Irrigation and Reclamation at the Omsk Agrarian Institute, where in 1948 he defended his thesis on irrigation systems designing and became department chair. Zalygin began to write while being a school student. While studying at the Omsk State Agrarian Institute, he worked as a reporter for a local newspaper. He began to write prose fiction in the 1940s. His first book was published in 1941 (''Short Stories'', Omsk). In 1952, he was first published in the monthly ( 'The Second Act'' 1952, No. 9), for which he later submitted a series of essays, ''(This Spring,'' 1954, No. 8) about the interference of authorities in the life of a peasant. This publication brought fame to Zalygin and drew him close to the magazine's editor-in-chief, A. Tvardovsky. From 1970, after the dispersal of the editorial office of and the resignation of Tvardovsky, and until 1986, Zalygin refused to be published in the magazine out of solidarity. In 1955, Zalygin moved to Novosibirsk and was mainly occupied by his literary work, although not abandoning the science. In these years, Zalygin, along with short stories, produced works of larger forms – a satirical novel (''Witnesses'', 1956) and (''Paths in the Altai'', 1962), in which he described his impressions of the biological expedition to the Altai mountains. His biographer Igor Dedkov wrote that was "an introduction to the philosophy...on which all the main books of Zalygin were built". In 1964, (''On the Irtysh'') was published in . The novel describes the catastrophe of the peasant life at the turn of the 1930s, during the collectivization period. "For the first time in the Soviet censored press, the truth about collectivization was told, for the first time collectivization was shown not in the canonical Sholokhov interpretation, but as a tragedy of the Russian peasants, and even more – as a national catastrophe". Official critics accused Zalygin of distorting the "concrete historical truth" and of "ideological and artistic inability". The artistic significance of the novel was highly esteemed by the public. The poetEnvironmental activity
Though Zalygin quit hydrological engineering in the 1960s, he never ceased to follow attentively what was going on in the country in the sphere of hydro-amelioration and water management resources policies, and took part in public campaigns against ecologically dangerous hydraulic engineering projects which were being worked out by GOSPLAN (State Planning Committee) until the last years of the USSR. His attitude towards state water management policies changed radically in 1961–1962, when the politically powerful Soviet hydropower agency Gidroproekt came out with the project of constructing a dam and a hydropower station in West Siberia, on the Lower Ob’. "I was shocked and stupefied, – wrote Zalygin later in his memoirs. – Back in my day I had worked in the region as hydroengineer, and I could clearly visualize the enormous devastation which a water reservoir of 132,000 square kilometers would have brought about". Zalygin became one of the prominent participants in the campaign against the Lower Ob’ Dam project. He went to various cities to discuss the matter with specialists – engineers, geologists, scientists. A key turning point in the debate came with the news of massive oil discoveries in the Lower Ob’ basin, but even after that the entrenched hydropower lobby would not yield up easily. Zalygin's articles elucidating the situation were published in one of the leading Soviet newspapers and drew public attention to the problem, converting the opinion of the administration managers. The fight ended in 1963, when a government decree ruled in favor of oil and gas over hydropower as the main priority in West Siberia. In 1985–1986 Zalygin became one of the organizers of a public campaign against another ambitious project, the Siberian river reversal, aimed at diverting the flow of the Northern (Siberian) rivers southwards, toward the arid agricultural areas of Central Asia. The campaign was successful, and Zalygin regarded it as an evidence of new possibilities for democratic interference in the ecological policies of the state, unheard-of in the Soviet years. Full of enthusiasm, he became the leader of the public association Environment and the World in 1989, and in 1993 joined the ecological party Cedar. But soon his optimism about the ecological policies of the state and public role in decision-taking of the Perestroyka years gave way to disillusionment and dismay.S. Zalygin, “Environment and Culture”, ''Novy Mir'', 1992, No. 9 In 1995 he quit the Green party due to discrepancies with its leaders. Yet the problem of relations between man and nature never ceased to worry him; it was central to all his writings of the 90s. He was briefly member of the ecologist Kedr party in the mid-1990s.Published works
Most notable books in Russian available on https://www.litmir.me/a/?id=12759 : * n the Irtysh(1964) * alt Valley(1968) * outh American Variant(1973) * ommission(1975) – Sequel to ''Salt Valley'' * fter the Storm(1985) S. Zalygin's works have been translated into English, French, German, Armenian, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Bosnian, Chinese, Czech, Estonian, Finnish, Hungarian, Georgian, Japanese, Kyrgyz, Kazakh, Korean, Chinese, Latvian, Lithuanian, Mongolian, Polish, Romanian, Slovakian, Swedish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese. Most notable English translations: * ''The South-American Variant'', transl. Kevin Widle (St Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press, 1979) * ''The Commission''. Transl. D. G. Wilson. Northern Illinois University Press, 1993 Most notable German translations: * . Übers. Elena Guttenberger. Frankfuhrt: Possev-Verlag, 1966 * . Übers. Larissa Robiné. Berlin: Volk und Welt, 1975 * . Transl. Th. Reschke, J. Elperin, C. und G. Wojtek. Berlin, 1970 * (Южно-американский вариант). Übers. Alexander Kaempfe. München, 1977 * . Transl. Th. Reschke, J. Elperin, C. und G. Wojtek. Berlin, 1970 * . Übers. Lieselotte Remané. Berlin: Volk und Welt, 1980 * . Übers. Günter Löffler, Larissa Robiné. Leipzig: Philipp Reclam, 1983Notes
Reference works in English
* McLaughlin S., in: ''The Image of Women in Contemporary Soviet Fiction: Selected Short Stories from the USSR'' (ed. and transl. by S. McLaughlin) Palgrave Macmillan UK. 1989. Pp. 212–214. * Hughes, Ann. “Sergey Zalygin and the ‘Zhenskiy Vopros’”. In: ''Journal of Russian Studies'', no. 50 (1986) 38–44. * Shneidman, Norman N., “Sergey Zalygin: Innovation and Variety”, in: ''Soviet Literature in the 1970s'' (Toronto, 1979) pp. 61–74. * Wilson D. G. ''Fantasy in Fiction of Sergey Zalygin''. Kansas, 1988 {{DEFAULTSORT:Zalygin, Sergey Pavlovich 1913 births 2000 deaths People from Bashkortostan People from Sterlitamaksky Uyezd Soviet novelists Socialist realism writers Russian editors Russian male novelists Russian male writers Soviet editors Soviet male writers 20th-century Russian male writers Novy Mir editors Omsk State Agrarian University alumni Full Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences Soviet military personnel of World War II Recipients of the USSR State Prize Heroes of Socialist Labour Recipients of the Order of Lenin Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour Recipients of the Order of Friendship of Peoples Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery