Advertisement

Advertisement

Ehrenburg

[ er-uhn-burg, -boorg; Russian e-ryin-boork ]

noun

  1. Il·ya Gri·gor·ie·vich [ee-, lyah, g, r, yi-, gaw, -, r, yi-vyich], 1891–1967, Russian novelist and journalist.


Ehrenburg

/ ˈɛərənˌbɜːɡ; erɪnˈburk /

noun

  1. EhrenburgIlya Grigorievich18911967MRussianWRITING: novelistWRITING: journalist Ilya Grigorievich (iljˈja ɡriˈɡɔrjɪvitʃ). 1891–1967, Soviet novelist and journalist. His novel The Thaw (1954) was the first published in the Soviet Union to deal with repression under Stalin
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Discover More

Example Sentences

Ilya Ehrenburg’s novel, “The Thaw,” was published in 1954.

The letter’s power was twofold: It would have made accepting the Germans’ offer unthinkable to any “Ivan,” and it expressed Ehrenburg’s mantra on disdain in the lexicon of a war of extermination.

From Slate

Ilya Ehrenburg, a novelist and war correspondent, clarified the role of the Soviet writer in such conditions: “It’s often said that we need to teach the people to hate. I don’t think it’s possible, just like you can’t teach love. Hatred is born in our people. They learned it at Istra, at the gallows of Volokolamsk.”

From Slate

Made in July 1943, the summer after Stalingrad, Ehrenburg’s statement is chilling, reflecting his belief in the need to move beyond a baseline hate to foment peaks of pointed resentment and sustained vengefulness.

From Slate

However, the Russian state’s inability to tap the rich legacy of Efimov, Ehrenburg, and other socially resonant humor suggests the country’s continued failure to fully justify the invasion, even to itself.

From Slate

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


EhrenbreitsteinEhrlich