Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 25 – Sociologist Lev
Gudkov says that when he began to investigate homo soveticus in 1989, he had a very different and what has now
been shown to be a mistaken view of what this category of people consisted of,
how it was produced, and how it would pass from the scene.
In a presentation to a meeting at
Moscow’s Jewish Museum, the Levada Center director says he and his colleagues
initially assumed that homo soveticus
was a personality type that arose in Soviet times in response to extreme
repression and that it would disappear when that generation died out (lenta.ru/articles/2019/05/24/homo_soveticus/).
“Our hypothesis,” he continues, was
partially confirmed by the events of the late 1980s and early 1990s, when the individuals
of this kind were passing from the scene along with the Soviet Union. Such
individuals were “adapted to a repressive state and had learned to live with
it.”
But what became obvious with each
passing year, Gudkov says, is that the values of homo soveticus were reproducing
themselves in new generations and in new circumstances because those new
circumstances were not as completely new as many assumed and because especially
after 2000 many of the old circumstances were being recreated.
Homo
soveticus both Soviet and post-Soviet, he says, identified and identify “themselves
with the state and empire but at the same time understand that the government
always deceives them and will exploit them. They recognize that this is a
system based on force and therefore they always seek to get out from under its
control.”
They were and are clever and
duplicitous and “extraordinarily cautious because this system affected their
entire lives” and was quite capable of destroying them. Thus, the homo soveticus was and is “quite
cynical, trusted only those near him … feared everything new and at the same
time was internally aggressive.”
Among the chief values of this kind
of person, Gudkov continues, are “the unity of the powers and the people and the
priority of state interests. As a result, the powers are not responsible to the
population or represent his interests; they are concerned [only] about the greatness
of the state.”
That leads to “a devaluation of
individual life,” to the promotion of self-sacrifice, asceticism, devote and a
special kind of spirituality, but spirituality is needed here in order to justify
this self-sacrifice in the name of the state or of some fictional values,” the sociologist
says.
That is why the state inevitably
appeals to “’the bright past’” because it legitimates the current powers that
be and the existence of a society under their control. And this in turn means
that any self-assertiveness or claims of rights is viewed as an unacceptable
challenge not only to the state but to the society of homo soveticus.
Gudkov stresses that “the Soviet man
was not an ethnic characteristic.” People in the non-Russian republics and the
Eastern European countries display these as well. But – and this is a point
often neglected – “all the same there are certain distinctions” between the Russian
case and the others.
“Even in certain parts of Western
Ukraine which were under the control of the Russian Empire, everything is
arranged somewhat differently; and the same thing is true in the Baltics as well.”
From this it follows that homo soveticus
has its roots in the Russian model of statehood long before 1917 – and it is no
surprise that it has continued and reemerged since 1991.
In his remarks, Gudkov makes three
additional important points. First, the sociologist says, this pattern has left
Russian society far more fragmented, atomized and distrusting than others and
left the society far less capable of organizing itself to defend its rights
especially against the deified state.
Second, has meant that even now
Russians find it difficult if not impossible to honestly evaluate the past of their
country. The reaction to Stalin and his
crimes highlights this. Russians can’t deny that he killed millions of people,
but they can’t admit it fully either because that undermines “the sacred nature
of the state.”
As a result, most Russians want to
avoid focusing on this issue because when they do, they feel a sense of “intellectual
prostration.” And when they are forced to consider the issues involved, they typically
choose to minimize the size and scope of Stalin’s actions and the number of his
victims.
And third – and this may be the most
fundamental observation he makes in this context – the end of one aspect of the
Soviet system did not mean that everything changed. Much has “remained
practically unchanged, and this gives stability and guarantees a certain
continuity and reproduction of ideological stereotypes and repressive and legal
practices.”
To say as many often do that at
certain moment everything changed was and is “an intellectual error.” The
continuing vitality of homo soveticus
is clear evidence of that.
No comments:
Post a Comment