Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 2 – Ever more
Russians and others suggest that Vladimir Putin has returned Russia to the kind
of stagnation it experienced under Leonid Brezhnev, but, Dmitry Gubin argues,
what he has done is much worse: Russia is not simply stagnating; it is
degrading and slipping into the Third World even as Moscow talks about becoming
the Third Rome.
In a commentary for the Rosbalt.ru
news portal, the Moscow editor and commentator says that “Russia is losing its
positions in the world” across the board, something that means and can be seen
in the fact that its “culture is also rapidly degrading and becoming more
primitive” (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2016/12/31/1580447.html).
Moreover, the degradation and
simplification of culture now is much worse than even that which followed the
1917 revolution, Gubin says. Then, that process affected ordinary people alone,
but now it affects everyone. “In the 1920s, an avant-garde existed; under
Brezhnev, a counter-culture. Now, there is no avant-garde or counter-culture.”
There is not even the kind of high
culture Russian intellectuals have long been so proud of. Some but not all of
this loss reflects the consequences of the end of the Soviet system and the
departure of many of the country’s best minds. But one can’t explain what is
taking place simply by these losses or by “a paradigm of a new stagnation.”
Moscow television isn’t horrific so
much because the regime has driven out all the interesting liberal commentators
but because it no longer has any space for serious discussions of art and
scholarship. Even under Brezhnev,
figures like Kapita, Averintsev, and Likhachev appeared on television; now that
is unimaginable.
One can’t this simply by suggesting
that those active in these fields now are second-rate or by making references
to stagnation, Gubin says. What is
happening is the direct result of Kremlin’s policies which have driven Russian
“into a new place: into the group of countries of the third world.”
“We no longer will struggle for a
place on the pedestal of honor as was true during the times when the US and the
USSR competed. We are not even a country of the second world, that is one which
lags behind but has hopes of better, like the East European countries,” led by
Poland.
“The Third World,” he continues,
“consists of countries with decorative democracy, personalist rule, and hybrid
systems. Here [Russia] occupies a slot at the very top, between Turkey … and
Kazakhstan … Rwanda and Uganda are in this very same group but for the time
being still much lower.”
Russia is no longer part of the
first or the second world; and even “Putin long ago stopped promising to catch
up with Portugal in terms of GDP per capita. In the world’s economy, we
contribute less than does Korea” and the productivity of labor in Russia is
only a quarter of what it is in the United States.
Indeed, Gubin says, “for the first
time since Peter I, we have turned away from competing with the first world,” a
clear sign of something much worse than mere stagnation although the current
regime tries to confuse everyone with talk about “the uniqueness of the Russian
path.” It isn’t unique at all but much like Turkey’s.
In Russia today, he argues, “the simplification,
crudificaiton and primitivizaiton of culture is an inevitable process is the
descent of the country into the third world, and this means that we do not have
the stagnation which will disappear when a new Grobachev appears. There aren’t
the mechanisms that used to exist, and the new one works in a different way.”
For any Russian, resistance to this
process therefore must assume “different forms than those of earlier times. One
must not, for example, retreat into internal emigration [because’ in
self-isolation now, there is no counter-cultural base” on which to rely. That helps to explain why so many are simply
leaving the country and going abroad to live and work.
“But if someone remains, he must
understand: today one must not just turn off the television; one must turn on
something else.” Perhaps the BBC, Mezzo or Arte.” No one should read “Izvesitya;”
instead, “read The Guardian or TheDailyBeast.com on line.” The Internet makes that possible, and that
makes learning other languages necessary for survival.
For a long time, Gubin says, he has
listened to BBC Radio 3 “because it isn’t Mayak.” And recently he had an
experience during a visit to Augsburg which highlighted just what has gone
wrong in Russia. In that German city, in a shopping center, someone was playing
classical music on a Bechstein. In today’s Russia, one can’t imagine any
analogy.
“This too is the difference between
the first world and the third.”
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