Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 1 – Some of the
novels which have the greatest impact on readers and society are never reviewed
by major media outlets or even taken seriously as a genre. Nowhere is that more true than with regard to
ultra-nationalist pulp fiction both in hard copy and online in the Russian
Federation today.
An intriguing exception to that
critical neglect is offered by Maksim Sobesky today on the Nazaccent.ru portal
where he points out that “literature was always a favorable place for
popularizing one or another political view,” including those involving Russian
nationalism (nazaccent.ru/content/6659-nacionalisticheskij-hudlit.html).
That
is far from unusual, Sobesky points out, noting that in the US the works of
nationalist writers like William Pearce and David Lane articulate nationalist
visions that have a wide audience but that are seldom reviewed by the
mainstream media. Indeed, he says, they are virtually “an underground prose”
there as there is in Russia.
But,
he continues, “unlike Western authors who describe an obvious anti-utopia, the
Russian ones always are drawn to realism: in their novels there is a lot about
ethnic conflicts and the way of life of the subcultures of the right.” Because
that is the case, the Russian books in this category may be even more
influential.
A
decade ago, Sobesky says, most such books were issued legally by the
Ultra-Kultura publishing house headed by Ilya Kormiltseva, but more recently,
because of the Russian government’s increasingly lengthening list of “extremist
materials,” these novels and stories have gone underground and are published
mostly on the Internet.
Sobesky
describes the works of five writers in this category. First, he discusses Dmitry Nesterov, the pen
name of Roman Nifontov. A longtime member of the skinhead movement, he first
attracted attention among nationalists for his novel, “Skins: Rus Awakes,” that
was published by Ultra-Kultura in 2003.
It
is “noteworthy,” the reviewer continues, that “old nationalists like the owner
of the Vityaz publishing house Viktor Korchgin refused to publish [Nesterov’s]
novel because of its lack of a focus on
unmasking Zionism.” Instead, it focused on violence and blood, and argued that
a harsh response was the only way for Russians to solve “the national question.”
Ultra-Kultura
reprinted Nesterov’s book three times for a combined print run of 14,000
copies. “Crowds of young people,” Sobesky says, “went from bookstore to
bookstore” trying to find copies. But they faced a problem: “law enforcement
organs periodically appeared and told dealers not to sell this bestseller. Now
the book is on the list of extremist literature.”
Nesterov
died in March 2009 in an apparent suicide, but many of his comrades in arms in
the National Socialist Society, which was then under criminal investigation,
called the finding of suicide “suspicious” because another of their number had
been found dead while under arrest only a few days before.
Dmitry
Chestny is a second example of this kind of writer, Sobesky says. He attracted attention in 2006 for his novel “The
Struggle” which focuses on “’the achievements’” of skinheads. He then wrote the
novel “Fire!” in which the narrator, clearly a stand in for the author, describes
“why I became an ultra-rightist.”
In
2010, Chestny published his story “Russian Will” in memory of Nesterov and his
friends. After that, Sobesky says “the name of the author disappeared from
RUNET.” But a search today for his name on Yandex found five million hits,
indicating that those who want to read his writings will have no difficulty in
gaining access to them.
Aleksey
Voevodin, a Petersburger, is the third writer Sobesky considers. Sentenced to life imprisonment in 2005 for a
series of crimes, Voevodin has been turning out novels and stories “one after
another,” including his 2008 volume, “My Struggle,” a title taken from Hitler.
His book too is available online even though it is on the government’s
proscribed list.
The
fourth writer in this group is Kirill Arnautov, a Blagoveshchenk activist for
the xenophobic Movement Against Illegal Immigration. After serving a sentence
for fighting with ethnic Chinese there, he published a novel entitled “My
Choice,” in which he described his experience with skinheads and law
enforcement personnel.
Fifth
is Volodya Zlobin, whose “first and most successful” literary effort, Sobesky
says, was his 2010 novella, “Nothing Special” about a group of opposition figures
who decide to go underground but fall apart when their leader is killed. Since then, he has published stories about
struggles within the subcultures of the extreme right.
In addition to these five, Sobesky says, there
are a number of authors with “exotic pseudonyms,” including Skimen King who has
written a novel, “Aryan Utopia,” about Moscow in 2017, Zigoslav Ryzhetarzanov
who has written a story making fun of the anti-fascists, and Alex_S who has
written about ethnic problems in Ukraine.
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