Anton Romanovich Zhebrak

Anton Romanovich Zhebrak (1901–1965) was a Soviet botanist, geneticist and professor.

Anton Romanovich Zhebrak
Born1901
Died1965
NationalitySoviet
Alma mater
Scientific career
FieldsBotany, Genetics
Institutions
Author abbrev. (botany)Zhebrak

Career

Zhebrak received his undergraduate degree from Timiryazev Agricultural Academy in 1925, then pursued a four year program in graduate studies at the Institute of Red Professors, graduating in 1929.[1] The Institute of Red Professors was created by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to address a shortage of Marxist professors,[2] Zhebrak was one of just 236 graduates during the period 1924 to 1929.[3] Zhebrak received a Rockefeller Fellowship, pursuing post-graduate studies at Columbia University in 1930–31.[1]

From 1935 to 1948, Zhebrak was head of the genetics department at Timiryazev Agricultural Academy. Over the 1948–49 academic year, Zhebrak was a professor of botany at the Moscow Institute of Timber Industry. In 1949 he moved to the Academy of Medical Science's Institute of Pharmacology in Moscow, where he was a professor of botany until his death, in 1965.[1]

Zhebrak had joined the Communist Party in 1928, during his graduate studies.[1] As his scientific achievements continued through his career, this party membership reduced possible roadblocks within the Soviet academic community; by example, he had witnessed that 62 of the 69 professors at the Institute of Red Professors, during the last year of his graduate studies, were members of the Communist Party.[2] In 1940, Zhebrak was granted membership in the Academy of Sciences of the Byelorussian SSR (serving as its president in 1947), and he served as an official of the Science Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1945–46. In 1996, Nikolai Krementsov published the book Stalinist Science, in which he cites Zhebrak, and others, as forces who found ways to bypass and even exploit the Party's political systems, creating more academic freedom than would otherwise have been allowed.[1] This was not without its dangers, as he was one of numerous scientists targeted by an anti-cosmopolitan campaign in the immediate period after World War II.

References

  1. Krementsov, Nikolai (1996). Stalinist Science. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 306. ISBN 978-14-00822-14-0.
  2. David-Fox, Michael (1997). Revolution of the Mind: Higher Learning Among the Bolsheviks, 1918-1929. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 133, 139. ISBN 080143128X.
  3. Banerji, Arup (2008). Writing history in the Soviet Union: making the past work. Berghahn Books. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-81-87358-37-4.
  4. IPNI.  Zhebrak.
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