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The photographs, drawings and texts published in this book are part of a collection of more than 3,000 tattoos accumulated over a lifetime by prison attendant Danzig Baldaev. Baldaev's father was an academic, an ethnologist who found himself imprisoned under Soviet rule as an enemy of the people. In fact much of Baldaev s family moved through the Soviet prison system, while he became a guard. At his father s suggestion, he used his access to document and study the tattoos that were pervasive among the truly criminal portion of the prison population, the vory v zakonye, or legitimate thieves, a semi-professional class who keep their own brutal laws. During his 30 years supervising inmates in St Petersburg's notorious Kresty Prison, Baldaev recorded over 3000 of their tattoos and parsed their meaning--the nihilistic creativity of a closed society--in the drawings and text that made the first volume of The Russian Criminal Tattoo Encyclopaedia a bestseller.
This essential second volume, which collects all new, previously unseen photographs and drawings, goes to the extremes of his incredible collection. Sergei Vasilev's photographs authenticate the images, Baldaev s drawings make sense of them, and through them both we glimpse an extraordinary world where the criminal s position, history and even sexual preference are displayed indelibly on his body, and that marked body serves as a passport into the underworld.
Hardcover. 5 x 8 inches. 399 pages.