Читаем Natasha's Dance полностью

If any of my youthful countrymen with good sense should become indignant over the abuses and confusions prevalent in Russia and in his heart begin to feel estranged from her, then there is no better method of converting him to the love he should feel for his Fatherland than to send him to France as quickly as possible.142

The terms Fonvizin used to characterize Europe appeared with extraordinary regularity in subsequent Russian travel writing. 'Corrupt' and 'decadent', 'false' and 'superficial', 'materialist' and 'egotistical' - such was the Russian lexicon for Europe right up to the time of Herzen's Letters from France and Italy (1847-52) and Dostoevsky's Winter Notes on Summer Impressions (1862), a travel sketch which echoed Fonvizin's. In this tradition the journey was merely an excuse for a philosophical discourse on the cultural relationship between Europe and Russia. The constant repetition of these epithets signalled the emergence of an ideology - a distinctive view of Russia in the mirror of the West. The idea that the West was morally corrupt was echoed by virtually every Russian writer from Pushkin to the Slavophiles. Herzen and Dostoevsky placed it at the heart of their messianic visions of Russia's destiny to save the fallen West. The idea that the French were false and shallow became commonplace. For Karamzin, Paris was a capital of 'superficial splendour and enchantment'; for Gogol it had 'only a surface glitter that concealed an abyss of fraud and greed'.143 Viazemsky portrayed France as a 'land of deception and falsity'. The censor and litterateur Alexander Nikitenko wrote of the French: 'They seem to have been born with a love of theatre and a bent to create it - they were created for showmanship. Emotions, principles, honour, revolution are all treated as play, as games.'144 Dostoevsky agreed that the French had a unique talent for

'simulating emotions and feelings for nature'.145 Even Turgenev, an ardent Westernizer, described them in A Nest of Gentlefolk (1859) as civilized and charming yet without any spiritual depth or intellectual seriousness. The persistence of these cultural stereotypes illustrates the mythical proportions of 'Europe' in the Russian consciousness. This imaginary 'Europe' had more to do with the needs of defining 'Russia' than with the West itself. The idea of 'Russia' could not exist without 'the West' (just as 'the West' could not exist without 'the Orient'). 'We needed Europe as an ideal, a reproach, an example,' Herzen wrote. 'If she were not these things we would have to invent her.'146

The Russians were uncertain about their place in Europe (they still are), and that ambivalence is a vital key to their cultural history and identity. Living on the margins of the continent, they have never been quite sure if their destiny is there. Are they of the West or of the East? Peter made his people face the West and imitate its ways. From that moment on the nation's progress was meant to be measured by a foreign principle; all its moral and aesthetic norms, its tastes and social manners, were defined by it. The educated classes looked at Russia through European eyes, denouncing their own history as 'barbarous' and 'dark'. They sought Europe's approval and wanted to be recognized as equals by it. For this reason they took a certain pride in Peter's achievements. His Imperial state, greater and more mighty than any other European empire, promised to lead Russia to modernity. But at the same time they were painfully aware that Russia was not 'Europe' - it constantly fell short of that mythical ideal - and perhaps could never become part of it. Within Europe, the Russians lived with an inferiority complex. 'Our attitude to Europe and the Europeans,' Herzen wrote in the 1850s, 'is still that of provincials towards the dwellers in a capital: we are servile and apologetic, take every difference for a defect, blush for our peculiarities and try to hide them.'147 Yet rejection by the West could equally engender feelings of resentment and superiority to it. If Russia could not become a part of 'Europe', it should take more pride in being 'different'. In this nationalist mythology the 'Russian soul' was awarded a higher moral value than the material achievements of the West. It had a Christian mission to save the world.

7

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Homo ludens
Homo ludens

Сборник посвящен Зиновию Паперному (1919–1996), известному литературоведу, автору популярных книг о В. Маяковском, А. Чехове, М. Светлове. Литературной Москве 1950-70-х годов он был известен скорее как автор пародий, сатирических стихов и песен, распространяемых в самиздате. Уникальное чувство юмора делало Паперного желанным гостем дружеских застолий, где его точные и язвительные остроты создавали атмосферу свободомыслия. Это же чувство юмора в конце концов привело к конфликту с властью, он был исключен из партии, и ему грозило увольнение с работы, к счастью, не состоявшееся – эта история подробно рассказана в комментариях его сына. В книгу включены воспоминания о Зиновии Паперном, его собственные мемуары и пародии, а также его послания и посвящения друзьям. Среди героев книги, друзей и знакомых З. Паперного, – И. Андроников, К. Чуковский, С. Маршак, Ю. Любимов, Л. Утесов, А. Райкин и многие другие.

Зиновий Самойлович Паперный , Коллектив авторов , Йохан Хейзинга , пїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅ пїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅпїЅ

Биографии и Мемуары / Культурология / Философия / Образование и наука / Документальное
16 эссе об истории искусства
16 эссе об истории искусства

Эта книга – введение в историческое исследование искусства. Она построена по крупным проблематизированным темам, а не по традиционным хронологическому и географическому принципам. Все темы связаны с развитием искусства на разных этапах истории человечества и на разных континентах. В книге представлены различные ракурсы, под которыми можно и нужно рассматривать, описывать и анализировать конкретные предметы искусства и культуры, показано, какие вопросы задавать, где и как искать ответы. Исследуемые темы проиллюстрированы многочисленными произведениями искусства Востока и Запада, от древности до наших дней. Это картины, гравюры, скульптуры, архитектурные сооружения знаменитых мастеров – Леонардо, Рубенса, Борромини, Ван Гога, Родена, Пикассо, Поллока, Габо. Но рассматриваются и памятники мало изученные и не знакомые широкому читателю. Все они анализируются с применением современных методов наук об искусстве и культуре.Издание адресовано исследователям всех гуманитарных специальностей и обучающимся по этим направлениям; оно будет интересно и широкому кругу читателей.В формате PDF A4 сохранён издательский макет.

Олег Сергеевич Воскобойников

Культурология