Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 12 – Much ink has
been spilled on the conflict between the television and refrigerator for the
hearts and minds of Russians; but an even more important battle may be raging
between Western culture and Russian values – and it is one that in Belgorod
Oblast, at least, Western values are winning out hands down among the young.
That is the conclusion offered by
Dmitry Bosov in his study of the reactions of young Russians to the heroes they
see in films (“Western Mainstream Cinematography as a Factor in the
Socialization of Russian Students,” Vestnik
Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta, Seria 7: 4(30) (2015): pp.
139-144).
Yesterday, the editors of Tolkovatel
portal excerpted and summarized Bosov’s findings (ttolk.ru/), suggesting that
the sociologist had chosen Belgorod “not by chance” because it is “a model
region for present-day Russia,” one that gives the incumbent regime the highest
levels ofsupport including for Moscow’s repressive laws.
In his study, Bosov noted that “among the
125 Western films” Belgorod young people have watched, 122 were from the US or
the UK. That in turn means that globalization isn’t about the dialogue of
culture but about “the domination of the world of mass culture in its American
and English-language forms.”
Belgorod young people like Western films
about fighters and comedies, but “in essence, Bosov continues, the two
“forma single picture of the world which
is based on action without reflection (the militant films) and a definite cynical view on the world (the
comedies) with a laughing dismissal of traditional and modern values.”
Indeed, the sociologist argues, these two
kinds of films reinforce one another, promoting anti-intellectualism and action
without reflection. And those values, he says, are the ones that are “spreading
in the student milieu [of Belgorod oblast] under the impact of mainstream
cinematography.”
The four favorite movie heroes of the
students are Blade, Spider Man, Jack Sparrow and James Bond, Bosov says, all of
whom are expressions in extreme form of the typical “mass man.” They may have abilities greater than others,
but they are people of action rather than reflection and promote the idea that
genius is somehow equivalent to “madness and criminality.”
“In present-day Russia,” the sociologist
continues, “almost in all spheres of spiritual-artistic and aesthetic life,
mass culture and art of the American type have penetrated. As a result, young
people evaluate others not by their work of creative achievements but by their
bank accounts.”
Bosov draws the following conclusions:
American films are “stigmatizing” work and intellectual achievement even as
they celebrate thoughtless violence and anti-intellectualism, and they are
leading Russian young people to conclude that “primitive bodily strength” is
the basis of who wins, something that is leading to “the demoralization and
degradation” of society.”
Tolkovatel says that if one translates
this from the language of sociology into everyday speech, this means that in
one of the most Russian areas of Russia, young people are increasingly oriented
toward “Western ideals of life, admittedly in a hypertrophic form,” a development
that means that Russian state propaganda has finally and irretrievably lost ‘the
information war.’”
Or put in even more common language, the Russian
portal concludes, it means that the heroes of Western mass culture like
Spiderman and Jack Sparrow “are winning” the battle with “the Russian World.”
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