(Here is what I thought was an interesting article from within Russia today  
by someone born under the Soviet regime). 
 
Melvin P. 
 
 
 
>From the Cultural Revolution of 1917 to the Counter-Revolution of the   
Present
Submitted by admin on Tue, 2006-03-14 18:53. Теория 
Ludmila   Bulavka
 
>From the Cultural Revolution of 1917 to the Counter-Revolution of the   
Present
Culture and revolution. Revolution and culture. This theme has  been  written 
about and dissected so much in our country that it would  seem that a  point 
of 
exhaustion has been reached. What more remains  for anyone to say? The  
overwhelming consensus is that its  problematical character has been 
perceived as  
little more than an  ideological ritual. The fact remains, however, that new  
things can  indeed be said, and that the relationship between these two 
forces   
contains the utmost contemporary significance, especially in our current  
climate 
of an emerging bourgeois counter-revolution in Russia.
 
The country of my birth - the USSR - is no longer in existence today,  and  
for anyone to look back at its history and to highlight, not just  the 
obvious  
tragedies incurred by the Soviet peoples, but also its  achievements and  
successes - and more than that, to demonstrate pride  in those achievements - 
is  
tantamount for many to be little more than  a sign of disease. But what 
motivates  
my desire to go back to the  past, and what fortifies my courage, is a  
recognition that what we are  living through now is a fundamental crisis of  
culture 
of global  proportions, which has not just affected Russia in the most  
squalid 
of  ways, but which has also destroyed a culture which always united the  
most  
contradictory periods of Soviet history. It is my belief that the   
destruction of these former cultural values has evoked a tragic sensation in  
the  vast 
majority of ordinary people, whereby they feel nothing more  than immigrants  
in 
their own country. To add to their belief that they  have no real future 
ahead 
of them, devoid as they are of economic resources,  they are also told that 
they  have no past. What is otherwise a very  abstract belief in the 
so-called 
'End of  History' is for us extremely  tangible and real.
 
The Dialectical Road

The dialectical relationship at work here can be  explained as  follows. In 
the 1920s and early 1930s history clearly existed first   and foremost as a 
transfonnative event; as a qualitative development of  society  which 
prioritised 
history as a category of time. By the 1970s  and the period of  Brezhnevite 
stagnation, history had effectively been  transformed into a kind of  
hypostasis. It 
now served first and  foremost as a social concept and as an act  of memory, 
which now gave  priority to history as a category of space. During  these 
years, 
people  could not directly experience for themselves the  humanitarian ideas 
of  social creativeness which lay at the heart of the  socialist ideal, but  
they 
could at least experience it indirectly as an act of  (staged)  memory. What 
exists today, however, has taken everything one stage   further. Not only is 
there no direct historical creativity of the masses,  but  there is also no 
longer 
any cultural embodiment of historical  memory. In short,  the individual, as 
a 
social subject, exists in a  situation where he can neither  create history 
nor have a memory of it.  If this is one attribute of the present  situation, 
there is also  another one which likewise deserves recognition. If,  during 
the 
period  of stagnation, we could say that history bore no sense of time  (as a 
 
process of development) but did give scope for space (as a cultural   event), 
then 
in today's situation there exists the unique position of  an  existence which 
lies both outside the principles of development as  well as  outside culture; 
that is to say, an existence both outside of  time and space.  Moreover, 
having 
torn asunder the umbilical cord  connecting the present with the  past, any 
conceptual notion of the  future must also be affected. It is from this  
starting 
point, then,  that one must understand this sensation of people being  
immigrants not  just in their own country, but in the whole of history.
 
The introduction of so-called 'democracy' and 'liberalism' in Russia  has  
thus accomplished something that the Gulags of Stalin and the  stagnation of  
Brezhnev were both unable to accomplish - the  destruction of hope and the  
creation of an overwhelming sense of  meaninglessness. Mankind as a generic 
being  has 
been thrown overboard  into the Sargasso sea of postmodemity. In the domain  
of work,  relations, and general life as a whole, everything is oriented 
towards 
one  thing and one thing only - how to make the most amount of money (with  
the  emphasis on make rather than earn). It is here that we can locate  the  
foundations of the modem crisis of culture, which is uniquely  engendered in 
the  
depths of the societal depression which currently  exists in Russia. To 
escape  
this depression, procure for oneself a  non-alienated conception of life,  
requires, at a minimum, forms of  resistance to the 'new world order', and  
wherever possible, the  creation of alternative ideas.
 
In order to understand the basis of the 'cultural idea' of today's   
counter-revolution - and counter-revolution rather than the self-promoted  
notion  of a 
'revolutionary' transformation away from the earlier  Soviet culture to  
contemporary postmodernism - it is absolutely vital  that we understand the  
existential nature of the interrelationship of  our initial point of 
departure:  the 
October revolution and culture. On  top of this, one also needs to have an  
understanding of the dialectics  of this relationship, because without this, 
it  is 
impossible to  comprehend many of the contradictions at work here as well as  
the  ultimate failures which eventually gave rise to the crisis of Soviet   
culture. But before we get down to this, let us first of all explore a  
number of  
crucial paradoxes at work here.
 
First, what is the nature of the relationship between acts of  cultural  
destruction and cultural creation during the revolution? Can  we perhaps say 
that  
the people at this time were simply barbarians who  failed to understand  
precisely what it was that they desired from this  thing called culture? 
Indeed,  was 
the destruction at work here nothing  more than an act of wanton vandalism; a 
 
wanton vandalism which was  really the main motif of the revolution itself?
 
Second, what explanation can we provide for the fact that tens of  thousands  
of people (and first and foremost young people) took part in  some of the 
most  
incredible processes of spontaneous cultural  creativity ever witnessed in  
history, at a time when they were also  suffering under the most bitter human 
 
conditions of cold, starvation  and rampant diseases and death? Of course, 
within 
the very act of revolution  one could locate the basis of an intrinsic  
celebratory idea. But this  in itself was surely not sufficient to compensate 
for  
the extremities  of the conditions which were to be inflicted on people, and  
which in  turn would give rise to a situation where people would still have 
the   
strength, the desire and the human resources, after all of this, to paint,  
to  
compose, to act, to write and to take part in all manner of popular  and 
street  festivals. And let us not forget that the engagement of  workers, 
peasants 
and  soldiers in such acts of spontaneous creativity  was already widely 
evident 
in  the very first years of Soviet power, as  witnessed for example at the 
beginning  of the 1920s, and in particular  the all-Russian congresses 
devoted to 
the  analysis and exchange of  experiences, problems and perspectives for the 
 
development of this  mass cultural creativity. For example, in November 1919 
(and  this in  the condition of civil war remember!) there took place the 
first   
all-Russian Congress of Workers and Peasants Theatres in which 243  delegates 
 
participated (including   Communists,    Socialist  Revolutionaries, 
Mensheviks 
and non-party delegates) from 27  regions of the  country. In 1921 there was 
the first all-Russian  gathering of musical workers;  one year after the 
creation of 224  musical workshops as part of the Proletkult  movement. The 
workshops 
of  the fine arts, meanwhile, (which by 1920 already  numbered 186) had been  
quick to establish themselves in those parts of the  country that had  been 
freed 
from control from the White Guardists, and in just  one of  the Petrograd 
studios more than 4,000 people were participating in its   activities. 
Finally, at 
the first all-Russian congress of proletarian  writers in  1921, 36 leading 
associations of proletarian writers from  across the whole  Republic were 
represented.
 
When it comes to the third paradox, this has already been the subject  of  
some analysis by Viktor Arslanov. Why, in the 1930s, precisely at  the peak 
of  
Stalin's repressions, did Soviet artists across the whole  cultural spectrum  
create some of their finest works - from Eisenstein  the filmmaker to Mukhina 
the  
sculptor, and Bulgakov and Pasternak the  writers? Was it because they did 
not 
understand what was going on in the  country at this time, or is it the case 
that  the Gulag is a necessary  attribute of intellectual, creative 
inspiration?
 
Last, but not least, the fourth paradox that I want to explore is this:  why  
is it the case that today, when the Communist Party no longer  exists and the 
 
'ideological monster' has been defeated, and the people  have been granted 
the  
full fruits of 'liberty' and 'democracy', there  has been no single 
worthwhile 
cultural development in the past ten years.  Indeed, on the contrary, we have 
been witnesses to its absolute  decline.
 
The enumeration of these paradoxes can be continued, but the main  question  
remains: what stands behind them and what logic forms the  whole bond of such 
 
paradoxes? To answer this, of course, it is  absolutely imperative to find 
the  
direct connections and the essential  dialectical linkage.
 
New Subjects of History

In October 1917 - and I am now referring to this  date not as an  exclusive 
political event, but as a process of real, qualitative   change - there 
existed 
the precondition for the emergence of something  vital:  the possibility for 
the 
realisation of the social creativity of  a great part of  the ordinary 
working 
people. The crucial thing to note  here is that they did not  just adapt to 
the new social circumstances  around them, they themselves formed,  created, 
and, 
to put it simply,  made these new social relations into something  materially 
real in all  domains of life - from the economic to the social and the  
cultural; a  reality which gave full credence to the basis of social 
creativity.  In  
addition to this, it is also important to recognise that the  revolutionary  
masses created these social relations in a contradictory  and often primitive 
way  
according to their own ideals and strengths;  in a word, on the basis of all 
that  'rich cultural baggage' which was  acquired 'thanks' to the Tsarist 
regime.
 
And here there emerges another important factor. As a direct consequence  of  
the events of October 1917, the workers for the first time  transformed  
themselves from a mere object of history and instead  became a real subject 
of  
historical processes; an opportunity which  was grasped in its fullest 
creative  
sense. In the course of this  process the decisive conditions were created 
for  
the emergence of two  vitally important tendencies. Firstly, the social  
creativity which was  unleashed was like a 'yeast' which gave rise to its own 
 essence 
of  socialist ideals and ideology. And secondly, every individual was  able 
to  
discover his/her own essence in the river bed of currents which came  to  
merge 
with each other.
 
Let us take a look at these processes from the perspective of  socialist  
ideology. The class struggle, which was both the precursor  of October 1917, 
as  
well as the consequence of the people's revolution  (in the guise of the 
civil  
war), became an extremely powerful catalyst  in the process of the ripening 
of  
the real material interests of the  rising masses. The revolutionary events 
of  
this period, virtually for  everybody, focused attention on the simple, yet 
often  life-or-death  alternative - are you for the Whites or Reds? The power 
of 
this  choice  is wonderfully captured in a whole range of contemporary films 
and   literature; with two of the best examples being Chapaev's The Brothers  
Vasil'ev  and Sholokov's And Quiet Flows the Don. In other words, the  events 
forced  everyone to choose and decide precisely what their own  interests 
were and 
to  express these interests in the most acute  political form. And through 
the  
manifestation of such Bolshevik  formulas as 'Peace to the People', 
'Factories 
to  the Workers' and  'Land to the Peasants', ordinary people were now 
energetically  cast  into the arena of historical activity. To be sure, their 
real 
interests  at  this time were not necessarily socialist, in a conscious sense 
of  
this term, but  by their very own participation in the possibility of  real 
social  transformation, an explosive ideological energy was  released which 
had the  
consequence of making them ever more  socialistically aware.
 
In its turn, the logic of social creativity (as with any kind of  creativity  
in general) gave rise to a set of ideals by means of which  the whole 
essential 
reality was going to be transformed. The origin of these  ideals, needless to 
say, predate the Bolsheviks, and can really be seen as  the result of the 
heroic,  and as a rule tragic, endeavour not only of  the people of Russia, 
but 
the whole  of humanity, tearing itself free  from the necessities and 
obligations 
of  Tsarism. Certainly, the  emotional, spiritual and moral suffering (as 
well 
as  endurance) of  this experience has always been very pronounced in the 
country's  art,  just as the counterposing ideals of social justice were seen 
as a  
product  of a wider, world culture.
 
This ethical, popular ideal was, of course, a long way from being based  on  
any scientific, let alone Marxist, foundations,     but  nevertheless this 
was 
compensated for in the quality of its moral  imperative  invoking a sense of 
justice; a form of justice which  propagated the other as an  equal to 
oneself. 
And for this reason,  then, this ideal could already be  considered social, 
notwithstanding  its at times religious-like undertones. What  differentiated 
the 
truly  social form of this ideal from the truly religious,  however, was its 
far  
less egocentric basis. Within the Christian conception of  morality the  
emphasis is on my duty not to sin. The moral question of my  neighbour  is 
not my 
concern, but God's. And in this moral lack of exactingness   towards others, 
what 
is strikingly apparent is the moral alienation of  the  Christian ideal.
 
And so, thanks to the appearance of the social creativity of the  masses,  
the 
previous ideal of justice finally starts to descend from  the level of the  
abstract and the transcendental and becomes, in the  words of Evald Il'enkov, 
'an 
historical happening'. That is to say, by means  of its insertion in the 
concrete  historical form of social creativity,  it begins to find itself (in 
a 
complicated  and contradictory way)  assuming the guise of the socialist 
ideal. An 
ideal of  socialism, not  communism, it should be stressed, for it is 
necessary to remember  the  words of Marx and Engels themselves when they 
wrote that 
communism does  not  consist in an ideal which needs to be made reality, but 
is 
instead  that which is  a real movement which destroys the present situation.
 
In its turn, the real material interests of the broader masses, which  are  
logically included in this social creativity, are at last  beginning to 
emerge at 
the level of individual or particular interests. Once  again, this is a form 
of  individuality which is already ideological in  nature and which can 
therefore be  said to have a definite existence.  As a result of this, common 
class 
interests  can now be established up  to a level which is still not general; 
something which  is after all  impossible in a society which is still riven 
with 
class   conflict.
 
What we can see, then, is the way in which the October revolution gave  rise  
to processes of a mutual formation of a socialist ideal (not in  an abstract, 
but  in a concrete historical form) and a socialist  ideology, each of which 
in 
its  relations with the other was able to  advance simultaneously and 
requisitely. The  acceleration of this  mutual formation took place at the 
level of the 
development  of its own  forms of social creativity, with the main criteria 
here being its   capacity to penetrate particular moments of social relations 
and 
transform  them  into something more universal.
 
The Tools of Culture

Not surprisingly, the drawing together of socialist  ideals and  ideology 
called forth powerful cultural explosions, which for the   working class was 
one of 
the immediate intrinsic legacies of the revolution.  If,  before the 
revolution, culture for the exploited masses had been  nothing more  than an 
expression 
of their alienation - viewed at best  as a useless leisure  pursuit of their 
masters, and at worst, as a  special instrument of their own  exploitation 
-then 
with the  development of the socialist revolution, culture now  found 
completely  new avenues of expression and understanding.
 
In effect, it became for them an actual working utensil. A familiar  tool  
equivalent to the workman's hammer and the peasant's sickle,  primitive to be 
 
sure, but nevertheless of tremendous significance,  because for the first 
time it  
created the scope for a whole new way of  life, affecting not just one aspect 
of  their existence (in the  political or economic domain etc.) but the sum 
total of  all their  social relations. And this sense of it being a 'working 
utensil'   should not be interpreted as bearing no concrete use. The fact 
that the  
working  class developed such a regard for culture was precisely  because 
they 
saw its  concrete potential.
 
Having said this, it is necessary to recognise that alongside this  there  
existed the fact of destruction as well. A subject of great  debate, this 
fact of  
destruction did not occur as some kind of  simplistic act of primitive 
vandalism.  As a rule it was very much  connected with that part of cultural 
existence 
which  had previously  been nothing more than an instrument of the blunt 
exploitation of  the  masses; an adjunct of the previous regime's policy of 
keeping 
the workers  in  their allotted place, and was therefore seen as the 
ideological  epitome and  symbol of oppression. This is the first thing.
 
Secondly, one must not forget that the revolution quickly gave rise to  a  
powerful social explosion, which brought forth an inflamed class  conflict,  
ultimately leading to civil war. Along with all the other  costs of this war, 
it  
was inevitable that there would also be cultural  casualties.
 
And thirdly, one needs to admit that there were inevitably some acts  of  
brutal cultural vandalism. These were not necessarily authorised  'from 
above';  
representing in some way an intrinsic part of the  ideology of the new 
regime, as 
it is all too frequently imputed today by our  new 'democratic' officials.  
Instead, many of these acts of 'vandalism'  were spontaneously carried out 
from  
below, and in many ways  represented the strongest embodiment of the depths 
of 
their earlier cultural  alienation. For some people, this was the only 
reaction  they were at  this stage capable and conscious of. To have expected 
otherwise  would  have been to expect a degree of critical maturation that 
only an 
access  to  culture could have given them; something that was deliberately 
denied  
tile  masses under the old order. Indeed, if anything, the surprise is  how 
little  vandalism there was. One of the real historical merits of  the 
Bolsheviks 
is the  way in which they were almost immediately able  to transform such 
furious and  aggressive feelings of alienation into a  constructive energy of 
social 
transformation, gathering in this cultural  alienation and making it the task 
of  a new cultural revolution to  extinguish it forever.
 
The social openness towards culture at this time, and an individual's   
self-awareness of it, occurred not only because it was turned into a  working 
 
instrument of the revolutionary masses as part of their desire  to create a 
new  life 
and a new civilisation. The maelstrom of  revolutionary events also gave  
birth to a revolutionary mass with an  acute need to comprehend as fully as  
possible the ideas which were  emerging, to understand their proper interests 
in  all 
of this, and to  link all of this together in the best way possible. To  
parallel their  emergence as a new subject of historical actions, artistic  
culture 
now  took on the form of a true, meaningful ideology; a philosophy of  proper 
 
cultural interests and needs.
 
Acting on the Stage of History was still not enough proper culture, in  the  
strict meaning of this term. Nevertheless, the social claims of  the 
uneducated  
and uncultured revolutionary masses now became the main  reason for the fact 
that  after the fires of the political revolution  in October 1917 there now 
began to  emerge the flames of the cultural  revolution which was to dominate 
the 
1920s and  early 1930s.
 
With the setting alight of this process there came to life brand new   
artistic forms, particularly theatrical forms, such that it would not be  
unjust  to 
speak of a theatrical October paralleling that of a  political October. As  
early as May 1st, 1919, in Kronstadt, there took  place a mass spectacle 
devoted  
to proletarian internationalism in  which 20,000 people took part. In 
Petrograd, 
meanwhile, in honour of the  opening of the Second Congress of the Comintern, 
another spectacle was  organised with the participation of more than 4,000  
people. In the  same period there was the spectacle of the 'Storming of the  
Winter  Palace' which saw more than 10,000 people take part, with the music 
for   
the spectacle being provided, would you believe, by factory hooters and  
military  warships harboured in the town. And these examples could be  
multiplied many 
times over. In short, then, the revolution forced the masses  out of their 
lousy  trenches and pitiful abodes, just as culture was  forced out of its 
arrogant  salons and into the public squares creating  the vector for their 
mutual  
interaction. This in turn gave rise to a  second tendency resulting from the  
social creativity of the 1920s; the  mutual interaction of socialist ideology 
 
with socialist ideals, which  was dealt with earlier.
 
True, in the immediate aftermath of the revolution, one could  certainly  
argue that there. But the development of this mutual  interaction between the 
 
revolutionary masses and culture was not only  evident in the fact that the  
working class began to open itself to new  and non-alienated concepts.  
Simultaneously, there also began the  process of the liberation of culture 
from  its 
previously organised  form of social being. The establishment of Soviet power 
 now 
made  possible the creation of a system of cultural values (through the   
institutional setting of not just museums, but also palaces,  libraries,  
galleries and 
concert halls) of the utmost openness for all  social sectors of  society 
without exclusion, hindrance or  discrimination. Similarly, the fresh  wind 
of 
revolutionary creativity  gave birth to new groups of artists who were  not 
just 
creatively  inspired, but who also had a tremendous strength of desire,  
stemming  
from the new possibilities which had been generated, to participate   
directly 
in the creation and furtherance of a new cultural politics. Against  a  
background of other motivations at work here, of course, this  nevertheless  
remained 
a vital driving force of such artists of the  stature of M. Chekhov,  
Malevich, 
Grabar, Blok, Meyerhold and many  others - all of whom had made names  for 
themselves before the  revolution, and who were then in the forefront of  
co-operating at  close quarters with the new Soviet regime.
 
The conclusion we can thus far make then is this: one of the main  outcomes  
of the revolution was the interaction of two sets of forces  or movements. 
First,  socialist ideology and ideals, and second, the  revolutionary masses 
and 
culture  - both of which intersected with each  other. The social basis for 
the 
new  creativity of the masses became  the centripetal force at work here, 
which  
connected all of these  components together in a new form of unity. To be 
sure, 
there were  contradictions at work within this new-found unity, and 
understanding   how these contradictions evolved is a crucial issue for us. 
Another 
factor  of  importance is the fact that the unity that was created became the 
basis  
for the  conception of a new cultural universality; a universality in  the 
guise of Soviet  culture. The development, and the ultimate  disintegration 
of 
this unity is what  really underpins the very essence  of Soviet culture.
 
Bureaucracy's Revenge

Why, then, was the integrity of this unity so  short-lived?  Without doubt, 
the main factor here was the way in which the   development of the Stalinist 
form 
of bureaucratism started to dislodge  the  processes of social creativity. As 
time went on, the mass social  cultural  movement was gradually relocated 
into 
formal, excessively  organised institutes,  and certainly by the Brezhnev era 
culture had  become nothing more than a  ritualised adjunct of ideology. A 
degree of  institutionalisation was always  inevitable, of course, and in 
itself is  
not necessarily a bad thing. In our  case, however. it went to such  extremes 
that it was simply impossible for the  earlier creative  tendencies to 
survive. 
Rather than being consolidated, they  were  simply smothered.
 
With the slow death of social creativity so the bedrock was laid for  the  
decomposition of all the constituent elements of the cultural  unity which 
had  
been uniquely created. Let us pursue, for example, the  logic of 
transmutation  
suffered by socialist ideology. From the  convictions of the 1920s it 
gradually  
became transformed in the  Stalinist period into an act of faith (with the  
suicide of Mayakovsky  representing a decisive symbol of this change), 
ultimately 
culminating as  nothing more than a ritual by the time of Brezhnev.
 
In the 1920s, as we have seen, the working class were considered, and   
genuinely felt themselves to be, the subjects of revolutionary  
transformation.  The 
veritable truth of socialist ideology at this time  was personally verified  
at 
every moment by living practice, as too  were the personal experiences of  
mistakes, contradictions and  tragedies. It is precisely for this reason, 
then,  
that it found the  form of conviction - as embodied in that old slogan, 
'practice  as the  criteria of truth'. But with the development of 
bureaucratism, all  
forms  of social creativity were destroyed. Or, to be more precise, the  
energy 
of  creativity moved from the domain of social relations into  the sphere of 
material  production (as witnessed, for example, by the  emergence of the 
Stakhanovite  movement and the enthusiasm of the  constructors of the first 
Five Year 
Plan  etc.) Let us be clear that  the critical moment here was not in the 
fact 
that  social creativity  entered the sphere of material production, for after 
all, this  in  itself was a very positive development and contributed to many 
 
successes.  After all, it was only thanks to the workers creative  
enthusiasm, in 
conditions  remember of absolute horrendousness, that  the programme of 
industrialisation was  successfully carried out.
 
No, the real downside of all of this lay in the fact that social  creativity  
was abandoned in the sphere of societal life. As a  consequence, new forms of 
 
alienated relations were created between the  masses and the new apparatchiks 
 
within the bureaucratic apex which had  been created to oversee die  
industrialisation process.
 
Or, to put it another way, up to the Stalin era die subject of social   
creativity was extremely diverse, encompassing as it did all social strata,  
from  
the working class to the formal intelligentsia, the party  leadership and the 
 
official ideologues, and at the same time was also  integral. As  
bureaucratisation developed, however, so diere began an  erosion of this  
integrity ot the 
subject of social creativity to the  point that it became  fractured into two 
different and separate castes:  the bureaucracy on the one  hand (at the apex 
of 
key organisations such  as the party, the administration,  the trade unions 
etc.) 
and the  working class on the other.
 
>From this moment on, then, socialist ideology starts to abandon its  earlier  
form - that of conviction - and becomes instead nothing more  than a form of  
faith or trust. More than that, it also started to  imitate that old 
traditional,  proverbial form of Russian faith. And as  the latter started to 
dominate, 
the way  was cleared for it to become  transformed into a duty; or, more 
accurately  speaking, a  moral-ideological imperative. With the canonisation 
of 
socialist   ideology, what we now begin to see is the emergence of something 
akin to a  
socialist form of Christianity. The new God (in the guise of Stalin), like  
the  old one, is deemed to be all-knowing, all-powerful, omnipotent and  
unique; 
its  relations are only at a vertical and hierarchical level  and are never 
at 
the  level of informal familiarity; and like the God  of Christianity it is 
beyond  reproach and criticism - in a word, what  we have is the return of 
all 
the old  forms of Christian  alienation.
 
By the time of the Brezhnev era, socialist ideology has further  elapsed  
into 
a system of rituals and rites, of an increasingly inert  and sluggish  
nature. 
Culminating in the events of August 1991, and the  attempted coup against  
Gorbachev, it is no longer possible to witness  any religious-like fervour in 
the  
ideological domain. Instead, a form  of ideological atheism has prevailed,  
amounting in effect to the  de-ideologisation of ideology. And it is this  
ideological atheism  which continues to prevail today, especially amongst our 
new  
breed of  post-Soviet philistines, whose one and only form of motivation is 
the   
accumulation of that currency which bears the head of a certain George   
Washington.
 
But the disintegration of the Soviet universality not only struck at   
socialist ideology, it also created a similar trajectory in the cultural  
domain  as 
well. From being an instrument of the revolutionary  transformation of social 
 
life, it was gradually transformed into an  icon of deified proportions, 
which  
re­created all the  traditional trappings of alienation. That is to say,  
culture was no  longer embodied in people's daily life experiences, which was 
toe  main  characteristic of early Soviet culture, when all social relations 
were  
filled with cultural concepts and when human relations were devoid of all  
forms  of alienation, but on the contrary, life now withdrew itself  from 
culture. For  some, there seemed nothing unusual in this, and  indeed it was 
defended 
on the  grounds that such a change in the social  vector of culture might 
even 
sharpen  the highest artistic personality  of the individual. Its effect in 
practice,  however, was extremely  negative. As culture became more and more 
an 
escape  mechanism from the  routine reality of an alienated everyday life, so 
it 
could  not help  but represent a dramatic reversal and defeat of the 
liberating 
potential of  culture, transforming previously socialised cultured 
individuals  into  an anti-social consumer of culture. Such cultural 
regression has if   
anything, of course, considerably worsened in the new 'liberal' climate,  
where  
its main role now is to be nothing more than a form of  'psychological 
release'  or mechanism of relaxation. Indeed, taking up  the refrain of a 
popular  
advertisement in Russia at the moment, one  might even go as far as saying 
that  
its function is not really  different to that of a piece of chewing gum.
 
Thus, the development of Stalinist bureaucratism eventually led to  the  
destruction of social creativity, bringing in its wake its own  destruction 
of  the 
fully developed unity of socialist ideals,  ideology, culture and the working 
 
class which had been formed in the  1920s and early 1930s. On top of this, it 
 
also destroyed the  foundations of a Soviet universality which had been  
creatively  established on two main principles - Soviet culture and Soviet   
civilisation, both of which had been united dialectically into a  common  
synthesis. The 
result of this disintegration was the coming  into being of a new  
pseudo-unity: a petit-bourgeois ideology, with  conformist ideals, mass 
culture  and a new 
kind of 'social creativity'  with very specific Russian roots oriented  
towards Mafia-type  racketeering, speculation, prostitution etc. It is these  
features,  then, which define our present condition - a condition which is 
very  much  
in tune with contemporary postmodernism.
 
In formal terms, postmodernism offers equal rights in the existence of  all  
styles and directions (although only in artistic terms), but in  reality this 
 
supposed freedom is really a turning back to relations of  alienation. After 
all,  look at the basis upon which  postmodernism  is  founded.  Within  
postmodernism in  general there is no concept of relation, no subject of 
relation  and  
even no conception of die Person/Human Being. In the absence of the  Human  
Being (as a representative form) the essence of human (moral)  problems has 
been  
extracted out of art and culture, which has now been  re-made without 
subjects,  
without problems and orienting itself to a  technologically comfortable form 
of  consumerism and consumer. As a  consequence, art and culture, as a 
socially  
unifiable language and as  a depository of non-alienated human relations, is 
now  considered  unnecessary. And it is thus from here that one can trace the 
modem   crisis of culture.
 
Or, to put it another way, postmodernism is an endeavour to create  history  
and culture without human beings as subjects of history and  culture. As a  
result, I think we can categorically say that  postmodernism is a legitimate  
cultural projection of contemporary  developed liberalism, including its  
present-day Russian  incarnation.
 
Conclusions

What conclusions, then, can be made? First, if we look back  at  the 
revolution from a cultural perspective we can see that it evolved   according 
to the 
following pattern: the socialist revolution created the  premise  for the 
emergence of a type of culture which was able to  overcome previous  
relations of 
alienation. We need to understand, of course, that this was not the&  only 
tendency 
of Soviet culture, but it  was more than adequately manifested in  its 
essence. 
And in this sense,  ideal communism -the world of non-alienated  relations - 
in Soviet  society was created in the bosom of Soviet culture and  especially 
in  
its heart and soul (Soviet art); and this is why even today  apologists  for 
the Yeltsin regime continue to strive after Soviet art forms. In   such 
circumstances this was the condition for the appraisal of the laws  of  
Soviet culture, 
which the majority of the working class accepted as  a kind of  prototype of 
communism - i.e. non-alienated social  relations; a situation  already then 
of 
real socialism, which was then  murdered by bureaucratism.
 
Here it is important to bring to light another contradiction: the  creation  
of this ideal communism in the realm of Soviet culture  appeared not only in  
advance of, but in isolation of, any  manifestation of real socialist 
relations  
in the material (economic)  realm of life, which was still conditioned by a 
very  backward form of  capitalism. The success of the former was not in 
itself  
sufficient to  overcome the deficiencies of the latter. Indeed, quite the  
opposite.  We also have to be clear, however, that in terms of what has 
happened   
since 1991, we have not so much moved forwards to a new stage of capitalism,  
but 
instead we have gone backwards to an almost unique postmodern form  of  
feudalism.
 
Second, and following on from this, the liberating potential of culture  is  
firmly connected with the liberating potential of socialist  revolutionary  
politics. That is to say, it was the revolution which  itself revealed the 
most  
essential laws of culture, which were fully  embodied in the practice of 
social  
transformation and social  creativity. Outside of this domain, the potential 
of 
culture is nearly  always restricted to little more than an act of  
consumption.
 
Third, the revolution engendered a new universalism in the form of  Soviet  
culture, which overcame, in an organic way, not only national,  but also 
state  
forms of culture, putting in its place a small niche of  world, international 
 
culture. Up to this time world culture had  consisted of a dialogue of 
different 
national and popular/folk cultures, but  the new Soviet culture represented a 
new  precedent of world culture  based on a completely different set of 
foundational  principles. That  is to say, it emerged as a result of the 
historical 
and  localised  experience of different peoples, consciously desirous of 
creating a   world of non-alienated relations.
 
Fourth, and finally, the general humanistic ideal of a socially just  and  
non-alienated society, which prior to the revolution existed  purely as a 
kind of  
abstract desire, became not just die main  component of Soviet culture (and 
here  we are referring first and  foremost to its socialist tendencies), but 
it 
also  entered the  mentality (the psychological and the spiritual culture) of 
the  people.  This is one of the main reasons why we can still say that even 
in   
today's Russia, while outwardly and perhaps intellectually the rhetoric  of  
anti-communism prevails, inwardly (under their skin) there is still  a great 
deal 
of residual commitment and belief in die values of social  justice, mutual  
assistance and collectivism in ordinary people's  approaches to the 
transition  
now taking place. This residue of  communist cultural values is not 
sufficient 
in  itself to defeat or  block die transition currently under way, but it 
does 
at  least help  explain some of die deformations in that transition process 
and 
why   the process of capitalisation has been far more problematical, as well 
as  more  vicious, in Russia than elsewhere.
 
If, then, in October 1917 the Bolshevik revolution created culture as   
communism, we should assert tliat our future task is to create, in die words  
of  
Karl Liebknecht, 'communism as culture'.
 
http://www.alternativy.ru/en/node/84


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