What is to be done? 
Dan Jacobson
In her introduction to Night of Stone Catherine Merridale tells us that she began the book with the intention of writing about ‘the disruption and reinvention of ritual’:
I had been intrigued by the idea that a modern revolution could try to create an entirely new kind of person. As I began to collect material about the Bolsheviks’ first efforts, about the League of the Militant Godless and the Society for the Dissemination of Scientific Cremation, the history I thought I was writing was a study of ideology, propaganda and mentalities. Death, or rather the rituals and beliefs that surrounded it, played the part of a test case. I could measure the impact of Bolshevik power by looking at the ways people chose to bury and grieve for each other. Rites of death, after all, are notoriously resistant to change.
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Dan Jacobson’s novels include All for Love and The Confessions of Joseph Baisz.
Other articles by this contributor:
The Price · the concluding part of his interview with Ian Hamilton
You Muddy Fools · In the months before his death Ian Hamilton talked about himself to Dan Jacobson