Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 17 – Many assert that
Russian society is both patriarchal and traditional as if this is something
self-evident, Dimitry Savvin says; but in fact, Russian society is neither.
Rather, it is something that, while externally similar to traditional and
patriarchal society, in fact is the direct opposite.
That is because, the Russian blogger
says, “the nature of the social system in the Russian Federation has an
entirely different origin and entirely different qualities” (harbin.lv/kogda-gosudarstvo-stanovitsya-papoy).
Unfortunately, both liberals and conservatives believe Russian society is now
patriarchal and traditionalist, although they give opposite assessments of it..
But “even the most superficial
review shows,” Savvin says, that while there may be some patriarchal and
traditionalist elements in Russian society, they are invariably in “truncated
and mutilated form” and thus the society should not be described as it so often
is. It is in fact something very different.
At the basis of a traditional patriarchal
system is a family which corresponds to it, one in which the man is the
unchallenged head and in which families are both large and multi-generational.
That was typical of Russian society in the 19th century; it is not
typical of Russian society today, Savvin continues.
Families today are fragile with more
than half ending in divorce.
Multi-generational families are almost unheard of. And single-parent
families are increasingly the norm. Sometimes grandparents help out and so
there is the appearance but not the reality of the multi-generational family of
the past.
Further, while one cannot deny the
numerous cases of family violence in which men beat or even kill their wives,
there are other developments that point to a transformation of gender
roles. The Russian government follows a
policy of “’positive discrimination’” against men, Savvin says. And women form
significant shares of many professions and even politics.
Many women now earn as much or more
than their husbands, and thus rather than calling Russian society traditional
and patriarchal, one should speak of it as being one of many societies passing
through the transition from such a society to a typical mass society in which
some traditional roles remain but are of decreasing importance.
Religion has lost the key role it
played earlier. The number of genuine and practicing believers in Russia is “extremely small,” certainly
only a few percent. Few Russians follow church
practices or church teachings on such issues as abortion, premarital sex, or
civil marriage as they did a century ago.
And finally, “in any traditional
society, each of its representatives is
included not in one but in several hierarchies and is the bearer of a whole
line of identities. He is a member of
his family and his church congregation or other religious community and
also a member of a local community … the bearer of a specific dialect” and one
who identifies with his region.
Almost nothing of that is left in
present-day Russia, Savvin argues. There
has been a mass destruction of all these traditional identities and the
homogenization of the population linguistically, religiously, culturally and so
on.
What then gives rise to “the
illusory aroma of ‘traditionalism”? The answer is “simple.” Both traditionalism and patriarchal
characteristics are associated by present-day intellectuals “with oppression,
prohibition and force. All of that exists in the Russian Federation in excess.
But the mechanism of the interrelationship of the society and the state is not traditional.”
To a significant
degree, Savvin argues, “one can say that in the Soviet and the neo-Soviet
period were realized the formula of Mussolini: ‘Everything in the state,
nothing outside the state, nothing against the state.’” Indeed, Russia has achieved that “in a much
more radical form than the Duce imagined.”
“The communist regime consciously …
destroyed religion, ethno-national identity, the family and private property.
And put in their place a totalitarian state. All traditional hierarchies and
forms of identity were wiped out. And as a result, an extremely atomized
society, on the one hand, and an all-powerful state, on the other, remained.”
There is thus “only the particular
human unit and the state, and the latter, given the lack of an alternative, has
swallowed up everything: the Motherland, religion, and the large family.” One
result is “that for the Soviet and neo-Soviet man, the terms ‘Motherland’ and ‘state’
are synonyms,” Savvin says.
“’Good religion in the case of the Russian
Federation is ‘correct’ Orthodoxy” because the state says so. And all the personal needs of the individual
are the province of the state rather than any other agency.
That pattern helps to explain why “the
chief of state in such a situation can appear like a Tsar. But in reality, he
plays a much larger role than a monarch in a Christian country. He leads not
one hierarchy but the only one – that of the state.” He is thus not simply a
dictator but a moral, intellectual, spiritual and even personal leader.
Present-day society in Russia is
thus “not in any case traditional and patriarchal. Everything is much worse:
this is a society dominated by totalitarian consciousness. And those who try to
change it by attacking traditional institutions are in effect not only beating
against the wrong targets but strengthening that totalitarian system.
“Unfortunately,” Savvin concludes, “very
few today see this for the simple reason that the opponents of this system are
themselves the products of it.”
No comments:
Post a Comment