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September 26 - October 2, 2008
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The Sound of Soviet Rock
By Vladimir Kozlov
A new interest in the former lead singer of cult band Zvuki Mu has inspired a book about the rock group.
 on view…
From Pig to Art and Art to Pig
By Max Seddon
Delvoye exhibits his tattooed pig skins and Gothic models at Diehl + Gallery One
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A Year at the Opera
By Raymond Stults
Moscow's biggest opera houses have returned to work with an interesting season ahead of them. On show will be old classics as well as new productions. Raymond Stults reports.
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Emotions in the Ring
By Tom Birchenough
While "Stonehead" is a subtle and unexpected film, the same cannot be said of the new, inappropriate Russian comedy "Hitler Kaput."
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Beauty and Her Beast
By John Freedman
Konstantin Raikin is not one to rest on his laurels. It wasn't all that long ago, maybe five or six years back, that he had built up one of the strongest troupes in Moscow.
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By Marina Kamenev
The Moscow House of Photography dedicates an exhibition to the Beijing Olympics.
Wanted
By Kevin O'Flynn
It is one of the first ads in the "Others" section, looking for "girls and boys" without complexes.
Salon
By Victor Sonkin
A new publishing house was created - Knizhnoe Obozrenie, whose main purpose will be to promote reading.
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Salon

Will the imprisonment of billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky have any effect on literature?

By Victor Sonkin
Published: June 3, 2005

With the sentencing of billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky to nine years in prison earlier this week, perhaps this is a good time to look back at the role of government repression in Russian literature.

Of course, there is nothing uniquely Russian about being repressed by the state, which has been a noble theme in world literature since at least Ovid's time. In Russia, however, it seems to have become almost a necessary stage in the development of literary talent. Alexander Pushkin, the father of modern Russian literature, spent most of his adulthood under state surveillance; Mikhail Lermontov, his successor in poetry, was exiled to the Caucasus. As a young man, Fyodor Dostoevsky was sentenced to death. He was awaiting execution when his punishment was suddenly commuted to penal labor, a surprise that spared his life but left the future writer spiritually scarred for the rest of his life. Later, he became one of the first authors to turn his prison experiences into literature with "Memoirs From the House of the Dead."

After the Revolution, things only got worse. The number of writers forced to leave Russia was vast; Vladimir Nabokov was one of them. In 1921, Nikolai Gumilyov -- a poet, socialite and African explorer -- was executed by firing squad for participating in an alleged anti-Soviet conspiracy. Osip Mandelstam, another poetic genius of the 20th century, was sentenced twice: first in 1934 for writing an epigram against Stalin, then again in 1938, leading to his nearly immediate death. Even in the seemingly more lenient postwar period, poet Anna Akhmatova and satirist Mikhail Zoshchenko were castigated by the authorities and lost almost all means of subsistence.

One of the first authors to bring the prison camp topic back into literature was Alexander Solzhenitsyn with the publication of his short novel, "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," in 1962. Another future Nobel laureate, Joseph Brodsky, was sentenced to forced labor in a remote northern village in 1964 for "parasitism." "I worked," he said in his defense. "I wrote poetry." Meanwhile, Akhmatova -- who kept a close eye on the young poet and understood how lucky he was to be exiled just temporarily -- commented, "It's quite a biography they're writing for our Redhead."

Now, the sentencing of Khodorkovsky makes one wonder if it will have any effect on literature. The ex-oligarch is known for his support of culture; his Open Russia foundation sponsors Russia's Booker prize. During the trial, he was writing a column for the newspaper Bolshoi Gorod, which was praised by many for its depth and style. Perhaps we are witnessing the first stages of a successful literary career.


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