Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 23 – Despite the
Putin regime’s open hostility to gays and lesbians, a hostility now enshrined
in the Russian constitution by amendments defining marriage narrowly as between
a man and a woman, queer culture is nonetheless reentering the cultural
mainstream in Moscow, according to Swedish researcher Maria Engström.
Whether this represents the Kremlin’s
focus on other things or presages a new attack on LGBTQ people is not certain;
but Engström says that the interest of the mainstream media in gay culture as
it emerged in the 1990s, a time defined as one of “’total freedom,’ has been
most successful in competing with the official version of ‘the roaring nineties’”
(ridl.io/ru/aleksandr-gudkov-i-russkij-kvir-povorot-2020-h/).
But she argues that what is happening
now and what occurred in the 1990s are very different things: “In the 1990s, rights of sexual
minorities were not a relevant agenda in Russia. Hence, gay communities of the
time were mostly apolitical and sought to preserve their autonomy.”
Now,
Engström continues, it is becoming more political with younger
people fighting for “recognition of non-binary genders and against gender-based,
racial, and sexual oppression.” As such, queer culture is already “an
interesting ideological and commercial resource for cinema and show business,
mass media, and the music and fashion industries.”
This
is not to say that it has won the day in Russia, she acknowledges. “Russia’s
conservative electoral majority still views queer culture as a ‘Western’ threat
to the sexual sovereignty of the nation.” But rather it is to insist, the Swedish
analyst says, that the regime has now tasked media figures to “neutralize” the
threat by “framing it in a patriotic/populist context.”
As
a result, she argues, “today we are witnessing the transformation of the queer
non-conformism of the 1980s and 1990s into something safe,” as alternatively
amusing or offensive but not as threatening to the status quo as many had been
led to believe. In some respects, Engström says, this recalls how the
Soviet narrative tried to absorb Perestroika values.
That worked in part but only in
part; and she suggests that the repetition of this approach with regard to
queer culture and its manifestation in the popular media are likely to have the
same mixed results.
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