Russian Postcolonial Poetry

Elena Gapova e.gapova at WORLDNET.ATT.NET
Thu Mar 16 18:00:55 UTC 2006


Dear Daniel Rancour-Laferriere,

sorry for the belated reaction to your message (I was travelling); still, i would love to make a clarification. 

I see the poems (posted in response to the question by Nina Shevchuk) as an illustration of the forms a rethinking of national identity can take in certain social groups, of which "Nash sovremennik" is (and seems to have always been) a mouthpiece. The group has particular social characteristics, as far as age, major regions of residence, occupation (or vocation), previous experience (or life course), current opportunities of income etc. are concerned: in the same way as pro-life (and largely pro-war in Iraq, and pro-lower taxes) groups in the US can be described (and "explained") in terms of their social belonging. To add one more trait: the "Nash sovremennik" milieu is also very "pro-life" and traditional in its views of gender roles (and when I need to show to my students how "nationalism" is also "patriarchy", I look there for a qood quote).

I would be rather cautious about judging the nation on the account of this very partial evidence. I also think that current "nationalism" (whatever is veiled by it) is, in the long run, not about the desire of Russia becoming the "biggest country" etc. (this is rather a trope), but about how its citizens have felt vis-a-vis "powerful others" during the last decade and a half, and how many of them rather lost, than gained from what was supposed to be democratic reforms. 

Briefly, I would rather see the Shemshuchenko's nationalism and "psychological problems" as an expression of a deep anti-capitalist feeling.
  
Sincerely,
e.g. 




-----Original Message-----
From: Slavic & East European Languages and Literature list
[mailto:SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU]On Behalf Of Daniel
Rancour-Laferriere
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 2:34 AM
To: SEELANGS at LISTSERV.CUNY.EDU
Subject: Re: [SEELANGS] Russian Postcolonial Poetry


9 March 06

Dear Elena Gapova, and other Slavist colleagues -

Yes, the injured narcissism of empire continues to grow in the 
post-Soviet space.  This sort of thing was less common, say, ten years 
ago, during the chaos of the Eltsin administration.  Only 7% of 
respondents in a 1996 Russia-wide representative sample agreed with the 
statement that "Russia should be revived as a strong military empire 
with the boundaries of the former USSR" (see my _Russian Nationalism 
 From an Interdisciplinary Perspective_, Edwin Mellen Press, 2000, p. 
164; also available in Russian translation from Ladomir).  From the 
postings I have seen recently on JRL and elsewhere, this percentage has 
now tripled at least (I don't have the exact figures at hand).

In any case, the poet you have quoted is expressing an increasingly 
acceptable sentiment.  This poet's self-esteem is wounded by the 
historical fact of the disintegration of the Soviet empire, and he 
lashes back at imagined enemies, he wants to bring back the knout, his 
grandiose need is not even satisfied with the fact that the Russian 
Federation - after all those 14 other republics have been shed - is 
still the largest country on earth.

Even historians without a psychological orientation have recognized the 
psychological problem.  Writing in 1997, Richard Pipes said: "Since the 
seventeenth century, when Russia was already the world's largest state, 
the immensity of their domain has served Russians as psychological 
compensation for their relative backwardness and poverty.  Thus the loss 
of empire has been for the politically engaged among them a much more 
bewildering experience than for the British, French, or Dutch" (qtd on 
p. 164 of my book).

Much more could be said about the mentality of Vladimir Shemshuchenko, 
based on his poetry.  But I shall refrain.  More important will be the 
political consequences of this mentality as it grows in Russia.

Regards to the list,

Daniel Rancour-Laferriere

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Use your web browser to search the archives, control your subscription
  options, and more.  Visit and bookmark the SEELANGS Web Interface at:
                    http://seelangs.home.comcast.net/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------



More information about the SEELANG mailing list