Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 22 – Russia remains
a pre-modern pre-class society, one based on social strata created and defined
by the state “for the solution of its tasks and the neutralization of any kind
of threat” and must be analyzed as such, according to Simon Kordonsky, a
sociologist at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics.
Speaking with a journalist from TV-2
in Tomsk, where he went to and then was expelled from a university in Soviet
times, Kordonsky both describes the nature of a system based on social strata
and contrasts it with one based on social classes (tv2.tomsk.ru/real/nashe-proshloe-nastoyashchee-i-budushchee-eto-ostanovlennoe-vremya).
In a society based on strata, each
of these is defined by the state by “a particular law in which are written down
all the obligations, privileges, and benefits of that stratum. A stratum is a
pre-class thing; classes arise in the market on a natural way, but social
strata are created by the state.”
“If a society has a class structure,”
the sociologist continues, “a mechanism for the agreement of interests among
classes appears. This is called democracy. Relations between classes must be
regulated. A parliament appears as do laws which regulate these relations [and]
a judicial system.”
In a strata-based system, Kordonsky
says, there is no need for such institutions. There, “there is no market, but
there is a system of distribution,” and there is an individual at the top who
is “the supreme arbiter” who makes decisions about “the two kinds of
complaints: some take too much and others are given too little.”
All such complaints “rise to the level
of the arbiter” who then decides about these things and is expected to produce
a kind of justice as a result.
There are numerous strata in Russian
society, and individuals are often members of more than one stratum, Kordonsky
says. At the same time, he continues, “the
new strata system in Russia has not yet been completed set up: there is the form,
but stratum self-consciousness has not appeared.” There remain some remnants of
class structure.
“In present-day Russia, this strata
arrangement is not recognized,” the sociologist says, adding that one’s
membership in a social group is not only a question of external arrangements
but also of “internal self-identification.” There are problems when these two
things do not, as in many cases now, correspond because people do not know how
to identify themselves.
In part, he suggests, this problem
is part of a larger one, “a deficit of power.”
What Russia has at present is “an imitation of power.” There is “the
power vertical” but there is no power.” People turn to those they think have
power only to find out that they don’t, although the system of transferring wealth
does work as long as there is wealth to transfer.
Despite the assumptions of many,
Kordonsky says, this system is highly stable because it has been in place for
centuries. At the same time, he adds, the
more the top wants to take out of society, the more repressive it has to become
– and that could at some point trigger a negative response.
But those who think this will happen
quickly in Russia are deceiving themselves, the sociologist says, because “in
place of the civil society about which [such people] love to talk, we have our
own institutions” like the bath and the garage and our own assumptions that
there are no others and never will be.
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