From Wikipedia - Reading time: 3 min
Lesley Chamberlain (born 26 September 1951, Rochford, Essex) is a British journalist, travel writer and historian of Russian and German culture and has published short stories and novels and written about food.
Following her secondary education at GlanmĂ´r Grammar School for Girls, she studied German and Russian at Exeter and Oxford Universities.
After becoming a Reuter's correspondent in 1978, she later became a full-time writer; her first book was published in 1982. She has written for The Independent, The Times Literary Supplement and Prospect magazine.
Chamberlain is married to Pavel Seifter, the former Czech ambassador to the United Kingdom.
Chamberlain here traces the influence of Kant's imaginative understanding of the human capacity for self-transformation through the artist's vision of beauty, as an inspiration for revolutionary change.[1] This notion is traced through Schiller and Hegel to Herzen, through Fichte to Bakunin, through Heine, Feuerbach and Marx to Turgenev, Dostoevsky, and Plekhanov, and ultimately to the Bolshevik seizure of power in 1917. The unfortunate result was not the "new kind of living" sought, but a "metaphysical disappointment", a perverse disaster, a "harshly policed" prison.[2] The "whole utopian journey" became an "abject self parody." The "freedom and openness" of the imagination "was not allowed to last" by the Soviet state.[3]