CONTENTS
Part One: THE GATHERING STORM
Part Two: A TIME OF CATASTROPHES
Part Three: RENDEZVOUS WITH STALIN
Part Four: THAWS AND FREEZES
Part Five: A TIME OF CHANGES
INTRODUCTION
Culture and politics have always been indivisible, and to maintain the contrary is also making a political statement. A stark and tragic example of that connection is Russian culture in the twentieth century: perhaps for the first time in history did such a brutal experiment of politics being forced into the cultural life of such a huge country take place over such a long period, continuing through world wars, convulsive revolutions, and the most ruthless terror.
That is the subject of this book, the first of its kind in any language: while studies in particular areas of cultural-political interrelationships in Russia in the last century are proliferating, there has not been a unified presentation.
The relationship between rulers and culture is a theme that has interested me since my Soviet childhood. My first collection did not consist of the usual toy soldiers or stamps; following Joseph Stalin’s death in March 1953, I clipped newspaper photographs of the late dictator with cultural figures like the writer Maxim Gorky or actors from the Moscow Art Theater. This is how far back the psychological roots of this work go. Later, as a journalist, member of the Union of Soviet Composers and senior editor of its
By education and personal inclination I have always had an intense interest in music, ballet, theater, and the art market—all integral parts of Russian culture—which sometimes seems to be terra incognita for other historians, who tend to rely on their teams of researchers and so often end up making egregious errors.1
As the reader will see, I focus on such masters as Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (and his students Igor Stravinsky