Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 – A 521-page
study of cultural life in Yekaterinburg over the last 15 years delivers a
devastating conclusion: Officials there despite having large sums of money at
their disposal effectively destroyed what had been a vibrant scene in the 1990s
and now oversee a sector that displays only decay, crisis and chaos.
The volume, entitled Yekaterinburg’s Pulse, was compiled by
30 experts and activists and was paid for by the city’s Cultural Administration,
the object of the volume’s devastating findings. The full-text is available online at ekaterinburgpulse.ru/images/epulse-full.pdf and is reviewed
at politsovet.ru/62223-krizis-i-haos-prigovor-kulturnoy-politike-ekaterinburga.html).
Because
of its enormous length and because some of those who helped conduct the study are
notorious for their critical stance, the book has been almost completely ignored
by its intended audience, the administration and the residents of
Yekaterinburg. That is a tragedy because
its criticisms are the kind of diagnosis needed if the situation is to be
rectified.
In
every sector of the city’s cultural life, from museums to theaters to
publications, the report says, there is either “chaos” or “a crisis” or most
commonly both. That reflects the absence of planning and coordination, on the one
hand, and the serious misuse of funds, on the other, the report says.
What
is especially tragic, the editors of the Politsovet news agency say, is that the
Yekaterinburg Culture Administration which paid for the report appears not to have
read it or taken it seriously. (The administration did not answer Politsovet’s
request for comments on the study.)
But
if current officials choose to ignore it, two other groups shouldn’t: the
residents of Yekaterinburg who have become the victims of the city’s mistaken cultural
policies and those in other cities and regions of Russia who should use the Yekaterinburg’s Pulse volume as a model for studies they
need to conduct as well.
Indeed,
Politsovet implies, that latter role may prove to be the most important
contribution this study makes.
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