Jun 1926 sitting left to right:
Georgy Chulkov,
Vikenty Veresaev,
Christian Rakovsky,
Boris Pilnyak, Aleksandr Voronsky, Petr Oreshin,
Karl Radek and
Pavel Sakulin standing left to right: Ivan Evdokimov, Vasily Lvov-Rogachevsky, Vyacheslav Polonsky,
Fedor Gladkov,
Mikhail Gerasimov, Abram Ėfros and
Isaac Babel In January 1921 Voronsky left for Moscow, where he met with Lenin and
Gorky to discuss plans for a new "
thick journal", which was called
Krasnaya Nov (Red Virgin Soil) when the first issue was published in June, with Gorky listed as editor of its literary section. In 1923 he organized a new publishing house, Krug (Circle).
Krasnaya Nov was a revival of a 19th century Russian tradition of the 'thick' journal - a periodical containing hundreds of pages, with sections on history, science, literature etc. The first issue of
Krasnaya Nov contained 300 pages. Contributors to early issues included high ranking Bolsheviks - Lenin,
Nadezhda Krupskaya,
Nikolai Bukharin,
Karl Radek,
Yevgeni Preobrazhensky the late
Rosa Luxemburg and others - who wrote "not the polite testimonials one might expect of busy politicians, but substantial and thoughtful articles." What proved to be the most controversial section of the magazine at the time was the literary section. Voronsky accepted contributions from "ideologically confused" writers, who were classed as "
fellow travellers", meaning that they were not communists, nor politically active, but were not hostile to the regime, such as
Boris Pasternak,
Alexei Tolstoy,
Sergei Yesenin,
Boris Pilnyak,
Konstantin Fedin,
Vsevolod Ivanov, and
Leonid Leonov and was one of the few Party critics to recognize the gifts of
Isaac Babel. According to the eminent Russian critic,
Gleb Struve,
Krasnaya Nov was "the principal refuge of fellow travellers". Voronsky also hosted literary evenings in his double room in the
Hotel National, Moscow, where writers and leading Bolsheviks met, everyone brought a bottle of red wine and poetry or prose was read by their authors. In the fractured cultural scene of the early 1920s, Voronsky and
Krasnaya Nov became the main target of groups like the
Russian Association of Proletarian Writers (RAPP), who argued that literature was a weapon in the class struggle, and thick journals like
Krasnaya Nov were "fortresses and beachheads of the armies of literature" and therefore by publishing works by 'bourgeois' writers, according to the critic
Ilya Vardin, Voronsky had "become a weapon in the cause of reinforcing the position of the bourgeoisie," and was "utterly hopeless in the resolution of the active political tasks of the proletariat in the field of literature." At the start of this campaign, Voronsky was in a strong position because he had high level party support. When the Press Section of the
Central Committee convened the first officially sponsored debate on literary politics, held over two days in May 1924, Voronsky was the main speaker in defence of 'fellow travellers', backed by Trotsky, Radek, Bukharin,
Anatoly Lunacharsky and other major Bolsheviks, while his leading opponents, Vardin, and
Leopold Averbakh were relatively minor figures. The outcome was a cautiously worded statement which established the principle of party intervention in literary disputes. Voronsky's strongest ally at the top end of the communist party was Leon Trotsky, who did not believe that in this early stage of the revolution there was any such thing as 'proletarian art', but only "the simple formula of a pseudo-proletarian art", which, he wrote, was "not Marxism, but reactionary populism." Trotysky's book,
Literature and Revolution was originally published in
Krasnaya Nov in 1924. Also in 1924, Voronsky hosted a literary evening in his flat, to hear a recitation of a poem by
Eduard Bagritsky, where guests included Trotsky, Radek, and Isaac Babel, at which Radek spoke disparagingly about the party leadership. This soiree formed of the case against Babel when he was arrested and shot 16 years later. In October 1923, Voronsky signed
The Declaration of 46, drawn up by Bolsheviks who were backing Trotsky in the power struggle that developed while Lenin was terminally ill. In an autobiography, published in 1927, he described hearing Trotsky speak at a public meeting in 1917 - "His words were cooling, sober, and among the jubilation and joyful excitement they sounded for the first time for me on that day, the exorbitance and heaviness of the paths of the revolution, the inflexibility and ruthlessness of its iron heel, its calculation and its will to subdue chaos and the elements." == Voronsky's aesthetics ==