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Zinaida Volkova : ウィキペディア英語版
Zinaida Volkova

Zinaida Lvovna Volkova (née Bronstein; (ロシア語:Зинаи́да Льво́вна Во́лкова); March 27, 1901 – January 5, 1933) was a Russian Marxist. She was Leon Trotsky's first daughter by his first wife, Aleksandra Sokolovskaya. She was raised by her aunt Yelizaveta, sister of Trotsky, after their parents divorced. Her younger sister, Niña, stayed with her mother.
She married twice, and had a daughter by her first husband and a son by her second. Both husbands died during the Great Purges. In 1931 Volkova was allowed to leave Russia, taking only her younger child, the son, with her into exile in Berlin. She left her daughter in the care of the girl's father, her first husband. Suffering from tuberculosis, then incurable, and depression, Volkova committed suicide in Berlin.
== Biography ==
Zinaida Lvovna Bronstein was born in Siberia, where her parents were living in exile at the time. Her sister Nina was born the next year. As a child, she and her younger sister Nina were raised mostly by her paternal grandparents, David and Anna Bronstein. The girls' parents parted ways in 1902 and as revolutionaries, were often traveling or living in hiding.
After the Russian Revolution of 1917, Zinaida married Zakhar Borisovich Moglin (1897 - 1937). They had a daughter, Alexandra Moglina (1923 - 1989). They divorced in the mid-20s. Moglin died during the Great Purges.
Bronstein married as her second husband, Platon Ivanovich Volkov (1898 - 1936), a Russian Trotskyite. The couple had a son, Vsevolod (diminutive Seva, later Esteban) Volkov, who was born in 1926. Volkov was exiled to Siberia in 1928,〔http://socialistorganizer.org/to-mark-the-75th-anniversary-of-trotskys-arrival-in-mexico-interview-with-esteban-volkov-trotskys-grandson/〕 but returned in the early 1930s. Zinaida had already left Russia for Berlin with their son. Volkov was re-arrested in 1935 during the Great Purges and disappeared in the Gulag.
For three months in 1928, Zinaida took care of her younger sister Nina, while the latter was dying of tuberculosis (TB), then incurable. Nina had married a man with the surname of Nevelson.
In 1931 Joseph Stalin allowed Zinaida Volkova to leave the Soviet Union to join her father, Leon Trotsky, in exile. She was allowed to take her son Vsevolod with her, but left her daughter Alexandra in Russia with the girl's father.
Suffering from TB and depression, Volkova committed suicide in Berlin on January 5, 1933.〔http://socialistorganizer.org/to-mark-the-75th-anniversary-of-trotskys-arrival-in-mexico-interview-with-esteban-volkov-trotskys-grandson/〕 She had been under the care of Arthur Kronfeld, a noted Berlin psychotherapist. She also saw Alexandra Ramm-Pfemfert. She was married to Franz Pfemfert, the founder of ''Die Aktion,'' a journal of expressionism, and translator of books by Trotsky.〔see ''The Prophet Outcast: Trotsky, 1929-1940'' (1963) and Jacquy Chemouni ''Le Père: son attitude à l'égard des troubles mentaux et la psychanalyse de sa fille Zina'' (à travers sa correspondance inédite). Cahiers Léon Trotsky 2001: 74, pp. 39-94, repr. in: ''Trotsky et la psychanalyse.'' Ed. In Press, Paris 2004, pp. 213-262〕
Ken McMullen, in his film ''Zina,'' suggests that the relationship between Volkova and her father Trotsky mirrors the Greek tragedy of Antigone. This idea was first substantially developed by the noted historian Isaac Deutscher in his 1963 book on Trotsky.〔see ''The Prophet Outcast: Trotsky, 1929-1940'' (1963) and Jacquy Chemouni ''Le Père: son attitude à l'égard des troubles mentaux et la psychanalyse de sa fille Zina'' (à travers sa correspondance inédite). Cahiers Léon Trotsky 2001: 74, pp. 39-94, repr. in: ''Trotsky et la psychanalyse.'' Ed. In Press, Paris 2004, pp. 213-262; some details also in: Julijana Ranc ''Alexandra Ramm-Pfemfert.'' Ein Gegenleben. Ed. Nautilus, Hamburg 2003〕

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