Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 31 -- Russians
remain “Soviet people,” Aleksandr Asmolov says, not in terms of the specific
ideological program pushed by the communist regime but rather according to
three deep structures which informed that program, ensured its widespread
acceptance, and guarantee its continuing vitality.
Asmolov, a professor of psychology
at Moscow State University, says that these three deep structures – “a cult of the
Center” which gave rise to the cult of personality, a world defined as one of
permanent crisis and conflict, and “a flight from freedom” and decision making –
still define Russians to this day (profile.ru/obsch/item/121081-sovetskij-chelovek-okazalsya-na-redkost-moshchnoj-konstruktsiej).
“At various times”
over the Soviet period, he continues, “these three characteristics took
different and specifically concrete forms. But the mechanism of the system, the
mechanism of the selection of the people who formed it always was in operation”
– and very much continues to operate now.
In many respects, the psychologist says,
“the Soviet system in large measure became the heir of Russian imperialism. If
one rephrases the formula of Viktor Chernomyrdin – whatever party we create, it
will all the same turn into the CPSU – whatever state we make, it will always
be ‘a tsarist empire’ in its despotic dimension.”
That sets Russian apart from many
other countries, Asmolov argues. “If you like, we have historically imperial
totalitarianism.” And it hasn’t ended yet.
“When people say that the USSR may
return, I view such statements with irony because there can be another form of
archaic development. But it can be eve n more horrible, with greater eruptions
of ‘the Black Hundreds’ spirt, because such a matrix exists alongside one when
the world became more diverse.”
And that is especially possible, he
says, because “today there are completely different mass technologies of manipulation
which were not available to the Soviet leadership.” Among them is “the
technology of television-promoted hatred.”
This Soviet man didn’t disappear
when Soviet power weakened and died. There was a brief period when it appeared
he might, but it did not last long.
External censorship disappeared for a time, but “thanks to the Soviet
system there existed a super ego which controlled and reproduced all the very
same stereotypes.”
“The Soviet man turned out to be an
extraordinarily strong construction,” Asmolov says.
No one should have been surprised
when Yury Levada reported that polls show that “as soon as our man was freed,
he began to “throw himself backwards not even to yesterday’s world but to that
of the day before that. He became a traditionalist, he began to show himself as
a pre-Petrine and not simply a pre-Soviet man.’”
The pollster’s work showed that “the
desire for a stable world when the stereotypes of the Soveit man are working
does not free him from the fear of an open door but frees him only from taking
his own decisions. Such a man is afraid and defends himself against any choice.”
The situation is no longer totalitarian, but it is authoritarian in much the
same way.
“We live in a time when we are
encountering three key challenges: the challenge of indeterminacy, the
challenge of complexity, and the challenge of diversity – and in this era …
even a small signal can change the movement of the entire system.” Thus, there
is hope for change and the end of the Soviet man. But as of now, it is only a
hope.
“If earlier there was an ideology
and the communist ideal with rhetoric about ‘freedom, equality and brotherhood’
were on the throne, now in order that there be a permanent crisis, on the
throne in the system has turned out to be security,” Asmolov says.
But one thing is very clear: “the
current de-ideologized system is less stable in comparison with Stalin’s” because
“no system which stands on the vertical alone can long exist. One way or
another, the vertical in a poly-cultural and diverse system sooner or later
will break into pieces.”
Whether that will be the end of the
Soviet man or whether such a man will demand yet another system that conforms
to his underlying views remains very much an open question.
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