The Russian Genius

I thought Richard Lourie’s column today in the Moscow Times was particularly interesting, and reminded me of several conversations I had during my last trip to Caracas.  A friend commented to me that a true totalitarian, whether you’re talking about Mr. Hugo Chavez or Vladimir Putin, is not satisfied with the simple dominance of the political realm and the powers of the state.  A true totalitarian, she said, is a totalitarian of the mind – occupying every sphere of public and cultural life, creating a name and cult of a personality much, much larger than their office.  Chavez, who just attempted to broadcast four straight days on the radio, is obsessive about always holding the nation’s (and world’s) attention.  Putin is arguably less focused in this regard, at least in my opinion, though we do get the occasional topless fishing trip and tiger hunting.  However Richard Lourie’s point about the historically important cultural role of a national genius to share the spotlight is well taken.

Vladimir Putin’s stability became a shaky stagnation, a swamp struck by occasional tremors. But Russia does not need a genius because things are dire in the country now, or will be soon. Russia needs a genius because something must resist the centripetal force of the government, which now controls nearly all politics, the judiciary, television and, increasingly, business. The voice that speaks out against that centralization of power could be that of a writer like Tolstoy or Solzhenitsyn, a religious figure like Avakum Petrov or Gleb Yakunin, a scientist like Sakharov, a historian countering the new trend to rewrite Soviet history or a even a businessman. Ennobled by prison, Mikhail Khodorkovsky could play that role — which is one reason why he may be reconvicted.

The task of the genius is to oppose the regime, to force a dialogue, to create a dynamic in a society that has none. The genius does not seek overthrow but true give and take. What Russian society needs are alternatives and inspiration, proof that there are other possibilities besides Putinism forever, to show themselves and the world that Russia is more than a gas company with a tsarist flag. For that reason, the genius need not be in direct opposition to the regime — a poet or scientist, a fearless judge or priest would shame the current regime’s smug and brutal drabness with brilliance and courage. And if that genius should in fact suddenly appear in Russia, then one can only say, “God help him or her.”

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4 Comments

  1. Asehpe
    Posted June 2, 2009 at 4:53 am | Permalink

    Frankly, I don’t trust Khodorovsky that much. My guess is he is more interested either in power for himself, or in simply being incredibly rich. At this point, I don’t see why he would be any less authoritarian than, say, Mr Putin if he had been in Mr Putin’s place.

  2. Junichiro
    Posted June 2, 2009 at 7:54 am | Permalink

    Just what kind of Genius is being talked about in this article? A Genius like Gorbachev? like Yeltsin? people whose leadership led to the crumbling of the Russian state? As far as stability and development is concerned, the current government in Russia is working effectively enough to make the country a full fledge global power again and any drastic changes in the political sphere will only drag the country back to the chaotic 90s. Perhaps this is exactly what author of this material wants to simulate, A weak and poor Russia, powerless to resist the imperial ambitions of United States.

  3. E. Henry Thripshaw
    Posted June 2, 2009 at 9:44 am | Permalink

    “Just what kind of Genius is being talked about in this article? A Genius like Gorbachev? like Yeltsin?”Well the author does make that clear, since he gives several specific examples…however, I think the gov’t & society would probably ignore such people, since current times are different from the Soviet times that form the context for his claims. Today’s Russia doesn’t need geniuses so much as it needs boring, competent administrators.

  4. James
    Posted June 2, 2009 at 12:13 pm | Permalink

    @Asehpe – frankly I think Khodorkovsky is more interested in not being held in prison any longer for no reason. You have no basis for tagging him as an authoritarian.@Junichiro – why all the same nationalists under different names leave the same garbage, I’ll never know. Try adding something of value to the discussion.

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