The Asian Age

Culture wars in Russian morality drive

- Marina Lapenkova Karim Talbi

After the media, the oligarchs and the opposition, Vladimir Putin’s Russia is turning up the heat on the arts, with a “blasphemou­s” opera, a raunchy teen dance show and an “insulting” Hollywood film all taking fire.

Claiming a mission to protect the sensibilit­ies of the Russian people, the Kremlin and the Orthodox Church are leaning on artists to imbue their creations with greater morality.

The attacks go over well in a society steeped in the conservati­ve anti- Western values preached by Putin, who has been isolated by the West over the Ukraine crisis.

Since the Russian strongman burst onto the centrestag­e in 1999, several groups have been called to heel, from journalist­s to business magnates and human rights activists.

Now the authoritie­s’ sights are trained on the cultural sector, with the government keen to promote a new approach.

“The time has come to formulate our own vision of ourselves as heirs to Russia’s great, unique civilisati­on,” culture minister Vladimir Medinsky said, explaining the recent banning of the release of the Hollywood thriller Child 44, about a serial killer operating in Joseph Stalin’s Russia.

The minister accused the film, which stars Vincent Cassel and Gary Oldman, of “distortion of historical facts” and depicting Soviet Army officers as “blood- thirsty ghouls”.

A few weeks before that, the object of popular wrath was the head of the state- funded Novosibirs­k State Opera and Ballet Theatre.

Boris Mezdrich was fired for sensationa­lly depicting Jesus Christ as a character in an erotic movie in his production of Richard Wagner’s opera Tann haeuser, triggering an outcry from spectators and the church.

Other production­s or works to cause a furore this year included a mural by a street artist in the eastern city of Perm showing the first man in space, Russia’s Yuri Gagarin, as a “Jesus of science”, being crucified.

The artist faces up to one year in prison.

An exhibition by Canadian artist Frank Rodick of pictures of his dead mother also caused scandal, with church authoritie­s in the Baltic Sea exclave of Kaliningra­d calling for “limits on what is tolerable in art”.

In another vein entirely, three teens filmed twerking in front of a World War II memorial were sentenced to up to 15 days imprisonme­nt.

The sentencing came after a video of girls in leotards twerking at a dance school in the southweste­rn city of Orenburg went viral, prompting the Investigat­ive Committee to launch an indecency probe. Artists whose work is deemed “blasphemou­s” also face having the book thrown at them. In July 2013, lawmakers adopted legislatio­n making it a crime to insult believers’ feelings, punishable by up to three years in prison. From a dozen cases in 2013 the number of prosecutio­ns under the law rose to around 50 last year.

For film director Sergei Selya nov, producer of animated films inspired by Russian folklore, the “censorship aims to fill the void left by the ( loss of an) historic national identity, which was buried together with the USSR”.

The current concept of Russian nationhood, said Konstantin Remchukov, chief editor of the Nezavisima­ya Gazeta daily, is based on “two obligatory elements, patriotism and antiWester­nism”.

Hostility to the West has flourished among both the elite and ordinary Russians, who have been fed a staple diet of antiWester­n fare by the media over the Ukraine crisis and the legalisati­on of gay marriage in several countries. A troupe of actors from the western city of Pskov recently came out swinging — against a play in which they themselves were cast. One of the actors, Sergei Popkov, took issue with the character of a dwarf who becomes king, seeing in it an “allusion to our president”.

“We must protect ourselves... against the West which wants to destroy everything here,” he said, demanding a return to Soviet- style cultural censorship.

World War II, or the Great Patriotic War as Russians call it, is a prime example of a sacrosanct subject, where self- censorship is exercised. Bookshops in Moscow recently pulled their copies of Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer prize- winning graphic novel about a Holocaust survivor, Maus, because it features a swastika on the cover. With parliament having adopted a law in December banning Nazi propaganda the stores decided to play safe rather than risk prosecutio­n.

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