Jonathan Dimbleby
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St Petersburg is an astonishing achievement, the product of visionary genius, but it is an artifice, a grand folly, a faintly absurd statement about Russia and about the genius in question, Peter the Great. Although it was conceived partly in the image of great cities like Venice and Amsterdam, its canals thread their way through a stage set built for visual effect rather than playing the role of necessary thoroughfares for the purpose of communication and trade.
The local girls are pretty but they reminded me of dolls or catwalk models as unreal as the city in which they strolled, reinforcing my feeling that there is a hollowness at its heart.
I was invited to a party to meet some of the city’s glitterati, an elegant galère of St Petersburg musicians, artists, academics and writers, most of them dressed in designer fashions, which like their owners, seemed to have dropped in lately from New York, Paris or London.
They were clever and funny but determinedly supercilious, as if that were the style for this year.
An interior designer told me that since the collapse of “the dictatorship of the proletariat” the city had fallen under the malign sway of a governor who imposed “the dictatorship of bad taste . . . We need a dictator with good taste”, he said — and I think he meant it. So what was his taste? “I try to combine misery and luxury together.”
I steeled my sinews to ask a serious question: what were the prospects for democracy in post-Soviet Russia? I tried first with a louche-looking composer of what he told me was “industrial music”. “Well, I don’t want the past to return, but sometimes I am so angry with the people about me that I think we need some big stick, some dictator to beat us,” he replied, with no apparent irony. “Well, perhaps not a dictator but a strong leader, one leader only.”
A painter, who was languidly dangling a small child from his shoulders, picked up the theme: “Nothing has really changed in Russia, you know,” he counselled. “Ten years, 15 years ago, some people — good people — entered politics, but once they were there they changed completely. That’s the impact of power. And it has frozen Russia from the 15th century until now. But don’t speak to me of democracy. I don’t believe the word has any meaning in the modern world.”
I moved on to interrupt a conversation between two exquisitely tailored young women, who told me that I should visit St Petersburg in winter when it was especially beautiful.
However, they added, they themselves would not be there as they would have departed for softer climes, probably India, “because, you know, St Petersburg is dark, cold, wet and depressing for so much of the time that you need one big break”.
Emboldened by the not quite chilled and rather too sweet champagne, I enquired about modern Russia. They said they were very happy with how things were. “And democracy?” I asked, venturing again into that terrain where no Russian I had yet met wanted to dawdle.
Of course I knew that, for the many downtrodden, impoverished post-Soviet citizens in this brave new capitalist world, democracy signified on the one hand American imperialism and on the other anarchy, crime, insecurity, unemployment and inflation. But perhaps these fragrant, well-heeled and apparently so very westernised citizens of the new Russia would have some sympathy with the concept.
“Why democracy?” they retorted in concert. “Is Germany free? Or America?”
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wait, guys...
the journalist called him the ''style facsist'' -- not the "facsist" at all ; the guy just didn't get it -- just the same way as you don't .
sharik, moscow, russia
Does anyone else see the irony of "The erosion of democracy by President Putin is the least of post-Soviet Russia's concerns"?
Andrew, Sydney,
One Russian political scientist "Democracy is a random game with an indefinite future": even though Russia is still poorly versed in the rules of this game, the overwhelming majority of Russians seem to have learnt these rules all to well. They prefer a better future to a indefinite one.
Finamrus, N.Novgorod, Russia
To say art historians, who root Leningrad that he - fascist! This full need to be such an idiot? Let say thanks that he was from intelligent. From simpler and could mug for the gain.
Korino, Kishinev, Moldova
This peice of writing is meant to impress British grandmothers with a freshness of a soap opera tear shedding. Very poignant. Very touching.
The author obviously made a mistake in genre by also including his uninspiring thoughts on the state of Russian democracy. But whatever makes Times sell !!
Shannon, Cork, Ireland
Speaking about the Neanderthal I would find myself in tears too if Id listen to a Natashas aria from The Queen of Spades.
Who is she anyway? I guess not a KGB agent otherwise they would call her Tatyana.
Alex, Kryzhopl,
Firstly, there is no any Natashas aria in The Queen of Spades. But I understand, for you all Russian women are Natashas: "dolls or catwalk models".
Secondly, you have no right to teach us democracy. Go to Latvia, where about 30 percent of population have a status of "legal aliens".
Alexey, Russia, Germany
The problem with the BG and USA is that they are incapable of understanding any culture that is different from their culture. And, if they don't understand something, they consider it wrong. That would be funny if they didn't force their 'democracy' on other countries by invading them.
Maria, USA, Russia
America has a democracy, but it kills people all around the world. China and Russia don't have democracy, but they don't have any war...So, answer yourself what is better for the world?
Mikhail, Moscow, Russia
Are you kidding me? To call "fascist" person from Leningrad/St. Petersburg! He was lucky that didn't get a slap on his face! this is the most terrible insult! I wonder what would do the person from Coventry who survived WWII to Mr Dimbleby after hearing something like that?
Marina, Moscow, Russia
The author gives a brilliant answer to his own problem: starting the page with the "concept of democracy" and finishing it with life and death phylosophy how could he wonder that "the concept of democracy is so far from being the point as to be virtually irrelevant".
Denis, Moscow, Russia