Shaginyan was born in Moscow. Her father was a doctor. She received a private education, and in 1912 obtained a degree in History and Philosophy, and began her career as a writer. In February 1912 Shaginyan wrote to the composer
Sergei Rachmaninoff, signing herself "Re". This was the first of many letters written between them over the next 5 years, many quoted in Bertensson & Leyda. Later in 1912, Rachmaninoff asked her to suggest poems he could set as songs. Many of her suggestions appeared in his Op. 34 set of that year (list of titles in Bertensson & Leyda). The first group, from
Pushkin's poem "The Muse" of 1828, he dedicated to her. In 1913 she dedicated her first set of published poems, "Orientalia", to him.
Rachmaninoff left Russia in 1917, never to return, and their correspondence ceased at that point. Shaginyan wrote the novels
Mess Mend: Yankees in Petrograd (1923),
Three Looms (1929),
Hydrocentral (1930–31). In 1931, she wrote to
Joseph Stalin asking him to write a foreword to
Hydrocentral, and received a reply, dated 20 May, in which Stalin apologised, saying he would have liked to have written one, but was too busy to do so. Reputedly, she carried the note, wrapped in cellophane, in the handbag she always kept with her. Before and during the
Great Purge, she was conspicuously loyal to Stalin personally. In 1934, evidently aware of the tension between Stalin and Russia' most renowned living writer, and the nominal head of the Soviet Writers' Union,
Maxim Gorky, in private conversation she denounced Gorky as an "anarchist" and "a petit bourgeois populist." During the mass arrests when
Nikolai Yezhov was chief of the
NKVD, she had a signed half page article in
Pravda in which she claimed that prisoners now known to have been forced to make false confessions under torture were doing so voluntarily out of a sense of responsibility to soviet society. She is also reputed to have complained about fellow writers that "Just because a few people have been arrested, they make all this fuss!" In August 1938, the first part of her novel
A History Exam - the Ulyanov Family, a fictional account of the early life of
Lenin was published in the magazine
Krasnaya Nov. It had been read and approved by Lenin's widow,
Nadezhda Krupskaya, and his brother Dmitri Ulyanov, but caused a scandal because it revealed that Lenin was part
Kalmyk. On 5 August, the novel was banned, by order of the
Politburo, Shaganyan and Krupskaya were reprimanded, and the editor responsible,
Vladimir Yermilov, was sacked. For the next 18 years, she was forced to stop writing in this genre and turned to essay writing. This resolution was overturned by the
Central Committee as "erroneous and fundamentally wrong" on 11 October 1956, after which a revised version of the novel was published, and a sequel,
The First All-Russian in 1965. The two books won her the
Lenin Prize in 1972. Shaginian spent much of her time in
Koktebel,
Crimea, where she had bought a summer house for her family. The Russian bohemian elite gathered in Koktebel every summer and stayed there until September, spending time at the Voloshin house. She died in Moscow at the age of 93. == Personality ==