Stalin's Gulag As 'Ivan Denisovich' Would Have Seen It

A map of the U.S.S.R. with Gulag camp locations marked

A subdivision of Ozerny Labor Camp No. 7 in 1951

Female prisoners in overcrowded, poorly heated barracks (undated)

Eating utensils recovered on an expedition to former Gulag sites (undated)

Female prisoners work with shovels and wheelbarrows at an excavation site at Belomorkanal in 1932.

Shock workers and officials from the Belomorkanal camp visiting a forest in Vaidai in 1932, posing in front of a banner that read: "Labor in the U.S.S.R. is a matter of Honor, Glory, Valor, and Heroism."

Prisoners gathered after a speech by the head of the Belomorkanal camp in 1932

Prisoners in the sewing workshop at Belomorkanal camp in 1932

A Gulag prisoner's padded jacket, with identification numbers visible on the back

Two men exit a paddy wagon designed to look like a delivery truck. (undated)

Prisoners eat lunch at the Bamlag camp in 1933.

Prisoners work on construction of the North Pechora Railway. (undated)

Patient-inmates in the infirmary at the Belomorkanal camp in 1932

Convicts work on timber at Ozerlag, one of the largest Stalin-era concentration camps, in the Irkutsk region of Siberia. (undated)

The Karaganda Corrective Labor Camp, known as Karlag, was among the largest of the Gulag camps. Seen in 1955, it was operated like a state farm and housed some 800,000 prisoners throughout its existence.