Ronald Hingley

Ronald Hingley
Born
Ronald Francis Hingley

(1920-04-26)April 26, 1920
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died(2010-05-06)May 6, 2010
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
Occupations
  • Historian
  • translator
  • literary scholar
Known forOxford Chekhov translations, Russian biographies
Notable workA New Life of Anton Chekhov, The Russian Mind

Ronald Francis Hingley (26 April 1920 – 23 January 2010) was an English scholar, translator and historian of Russia, specializing in Russian history and literature.

Hingley was the translator and editor of the nine-volume collection of Chekhov's works published by Oxford University Press between 1974 and 1980 (known as the Oxford Chekhov).[1] He also wrote numerous books including biographies of Chekhov, Dostoyevsky, Stalin and Boris Pasternak. He won the James Tait Black Award for his 1976 biography A New Life of Anton Chekhov. He also translated several works of Russian literature, among them Alexander Solzhenitsyn's classic One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich which Hingley co-translated with Max Hayward.

He was a governing body fellow of St Antony's College, Oxford, from 1961 to 1987 and an emeritus fellow from 1987 onwards.

Selected works

  • The Undiscovered Dostoyevsky (1962)
  • Nihilists: Russian Radicals and Revolutionaries in the Reign of Alexander II (1855-81) (1967)
  • The Tsars: Russian Autocrats, 1533-1917 (1968)
  • The Russian Secret Police: Muscovite, Imperial Russian and Soviet Political Security Operations (1970)
  • Russian Revolution (Bodley Head Contemporary History) (1970)
  • A Concise History of Russia (1972)
  • A People in Turmoil: Revolutions in Russia (1973)
  • Joseph Stalin: Man and Legend (Leaders of Our Time) (1974)
  • A New Life of Anton Chekhov (1976)
  • Russian Writers and Society in the Nineteenth Century (1977)
  • Dostoyevsky, His Life and Work (1978)
  • The Russian Mind (1978) - "An extensive, anecdotal exploration of the Russian mind and character portrays salient behavior traits and attitudes and examines characteristic social and cultural phenomena."[2][3]
  • Russian Writers and Soviet Society, 1917-1978 (1979)
  • Nightingale Fever: Russian Poets in Revolution (1981)
  • Pasternak (1983)
  • A Life of Chekhov (Oxford Lives) (1989)
  • Russia: A Concise History (1991)

References