Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 27 – Many explanations
have been offered for what some call “the Russian disease,” the tendency for
life expectancy among Russian men and then among Russian women to fall,
something not characteristic of any other country in the world, historian
Andrey Sklyarov notes.
Among the causes that have been
suggested, he points out in a new essay on the Rufabula portal are high rates
of smoking, drinking and obesity, poor diet and inadequate medical care. But there are other countries where risk
factors are higher, and even “taken together,” they can’t explain this unfortunate
Russian trend (rufabula.com/articles/2015/09/26/russian-disease).
That means,
Sklyarov says, that “the real causes of the Russian disease are to be found in
the psychological, cultural, and mental sphere.” But the aspects of these people normally
point to – atomization, the lack of critical thought, dualism and hypocrisy –
he argues, are only symptoms. “They also are the result and not the cause.”
The real cause, Sklyarov argues, is
to be found “not in the character of the people, not in propaganda, not in some
thought up defects of Russians and not even in history or geography.” Instead, it
is located in the immediate environment Russians live in, the high-rise panel
apartment blocks of the residential “sleeping” districts of Russian cities.
“All the causes of the appearance
and development of collective apathy in the USSR and the entire former ‘Eastern
bloc’ lie in our sleeping districts,” he continues, places were all the
building have been constructed according to a signal design, something that
makes “impossible the formation of a healthy urban community.”
Evidence for this, Sklyarov says, is
to be found far away in a disastrous social experiment that conducted in the United
States in 1954. At that time, officials in
St. Louis decided to build “a new micro-district” consisting of identical high
rises. Known as the Pruitt-Igoe project, it became notorious for its high rates
of crime and poverty and symbolized public policy failure.
That marked the beginning of an
American trend away from such projects, Sklyarov says. But in Russia, “there
are thousands of such micro-districts across the country. These, our very own Pruitt-Igoe
projects, have been left standing for decades and more than one generation has
grown up” in them, with all the social pathologies they promote.
In the West, most residents of the
projects were poor and so the direct impact of such structures affected those
at the bottom of the social and economic pyramid. But in Russia, “a large part
of the population of Russia” is to be found in them and such people have become
accustomed to live “according to the pattern of ‘work-home-television-sleep’”
as a result.
And it is precisely these people who
are “the chief carriers of ‘the Russian disease.’” They feel that they have no
choice and fall into “alienation, irresponsibility, and apathy.” They take to
drink, get involved in accidents, or commit suicide because of this, Sklyarov
argues, and that leads to ever lower life expectancies.
These project-like “sleeping
districts,” he continues, “are the real eco-system of the Russian matrix.” And
he suggests that “Russia up to now has not taken shape as an urban community to
a large extent because of the structure of the micro-districts” whose physical
arrangements do not promote “the formation of an urban neighborhood community.”
Consequently, “despite the high
level of urbanization, Russian cities to a large extent are ‘concrete villages,’
which have never escaped from the archaic past or acquired anything
contemporary. No self-organization or initiative in such conditions appears.
Rather just the reverse.”
“The rebirth of mystical obscurantism
and superstition, on the one hand, and dumb soulless consumerism on the other
all testify to the hopeless of people before the oppressing nature” of these Russian
“projects” in which people feel they can change nothing and that nothing depends
on them.
“In these apartments, houses, and
districts is being formed that destruction consciousness which is spreading
through society ever more strongly with each generation.” Indeed, Sklyarov
says, one can say that “our houses are killing us” or at least killing any
possibility for a better future.
Russians who live in these places
feel that anything good was in the past, that “nothing new will happen,” and
that “everything will repeat itself endlessly from day to day.” That takes away
from individuals any sense of the need for their existence and creates stress,
all as a result of “the oppressing sameness” of the immediate environment.
“Everywhere where Soviet panel
construction has appeared, similar processes have occurred,” with the residents
over time “acquiring the psychology of atomized marginals,” even in the case of
Afghanistan where there is a Soviet micro-district, the historian points out.
According to Sklyarov, “the only
means of escaping from the consequences given birth to by the housing
structures of the USSR is to tear all such Soviet buildings down. Not improve
them, not optimize them, and not reconstruct them. But tear them down and
remove them from memory once and for all.” Otherwise even worse things are
ahead.
These Soviet projects must not be
replaced by new brick monoliths which would have the same effect, he argues.
Instead, Russia must shift to the European model of relatively small houses, in
real neighborhoods that differ dramatically from one another and thus encourage
people to do the same.
No comments:
Post a Comment