Early life and career Dymshits was born in to an intellectual family of an engineer with close cultural ties to Germany, and spoke German as his second language since childhood. After receiving his primary education Dymshits studied at the Institute of Art history in Leningrad and after graduating in 1930 he began working at the
Pushkin House. From 1934 Dymshits was a member of the
Soviet Writers' Union. At this time he was working in the literary criticism department of the
Zvezda magazine. In 1936 he received his doctorate with a thesis on the
poetry of the Bolshevik press between 1890 and 1917. He wrote his habilitation thesis on
Vladimir Mayakovsky. The assessment dragged on until 1943, but was ultimately rejected.
Cultural officer of the SMAD From 1941, Dymshits worked as a political officer in the army newspaper
Znamja pobedy and gave lectures to soldiers about the state of the German army in Russia. He also published short reports and literary sketches about his experiences at the front. He was also responsible for the propaganda texts that were broadcast once a week across the front line to the German soldiers via loudspeaker trucks. In May 1945, Dymshits was sent to Germany as a press officer. After a stopover in Potsdam, he worked in the cultural department of the
Tägliche Rundschau. From November 1945 he worked in the cultural directorate of the
SMAD. He oversaw the restoration and reopening of theaters, the compilation of performance schedules, the engagement of actors and much more. He was also significantly involved in the founding of
DEFA. While on the one hand he advocated the performance of controversial pieces, at the same time he published party-line articles in the
Tägliche Rundschau on new art developments. An article written by Dymshits and published in the Tägliche Rundschau on 19 and 24 November 1949 marked the start of the formalism debate in the GDR. In this article he accused
Pablo Picasso,
Marc Chagall,
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and
Karl Hofer of "mummanship" and "falsification of reality". From 1963 to 1966 he worked as editor-in-chief of the script and editorial board of the
State Committee for Cinematography and from 1964 to 1968 he was the head of the department of screenwriting and film studies at VGIK. From 1972 to 1975 he was deputy director of Maxim Gorky Literature Institute. Dymshits died on 2 January 1975 and was buried at the
Novodevichy Cemetery. ==References==