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Moscow after the Apocalypse
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
This article focuses on the apocalyptic images of Moscow that not only proliferated in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Soviet Union but that have also persisted during the 2000s. Mark Griffiths analyzes Tat'iana Tolstaia's Kys' (2000) and Dmitrii Glukhovskii's Metro 2033 (2005), comparing and contrasting the roles of Muscovite space in these narratives. Riddled with misinterpreted ideas and mutated remainders, turned upside down by ideological volte-face, and haunted by uncanny vestiges of preapocalyptic life, these postapocalyptic worlds are not tabulae rasae but pastiches that reflect post-Soviet transformations. In Kys', Moscow's concentric circles are connected to temporal cyclically, disrupting narratives of progress. In Metro 2033, the fragmentation of Moscow's metro system allows Glukhovskii to thematize the splintering of the post-Soviet city. Both novels evoke the long-standing opposition between Moscow's center and periphery but unveil the darkness of the hollow core, raising questions about the city's past, present, and future.
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- Moscow: A Global City?
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2013
References
With sincere thanks to Seth Graham, Phil Cavendish, Julian Graffy, Polly Jones, and Susan Morrissey for all of their help and advice during the shaping of this work, and to Mark D. Steinberg, Oliwia Berdak, and the anonymous reviewers for Slavic Review for all of their ideas and comments that allowed me to improve this article. I would also like to thank Sarah Hudspith and the participants of the conference “Moscow: A Global City,” University of Leeds, for their insightful suggestions and for making this publication possible. My thanks also go to the United Kingdom's Arts and Humanities Research Council for funding this research. Epigraph from Rudyard Kipling, “Cities and Thrones and Powers,” in David Cecil and Allen Tate, eds., Modern Verse in English (London, 1958), 111.
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37. The seven gates are a clear reference to Campanella's seven-walled City of the Sun.
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44. Tolstaia's evocation of the lost island of Atlantis is reminiscent of the moment when Zamiatin's D-503 finally breaks through the Green Wall. Surrounded by the beauty of the natural world, D-503 conjures the analogy of stumbling upon “a sixth, a seventh continent in the ocean, some Atlantis.” Zamiatin, My, 137.
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47. Moskva 2042 concludes with a similar moment of revolution and regression. Effigies of the former ruler are burned, his supporters are mercilessly crucified, the Solzhenitsyn figure returns on a white steed, and a new set of medieval rules are put in place. Voinovich, , Moskva 2042, 314–16, 325-26Google Scholar.
48. Tolstaia, , “Nepal ‘tsy,” 419 Google Scholar. In the novel's English translation, Jamey Gambrell emphasizes the association with rys (lynx), entitling the work The Slynx.
49. Ibid., 422.
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51. Ibid., 16,19,26,35,47, 69.
52. Andrei Nemzer, “Azbuka kak azbuka: Tat'iana Tolstaia nadeetsia obuchit’ gramote vsekh buratin,” at http://www.ruthenia.ru/nemzer/kys.html (last accessed 31 May 2013). view with Dmitrii Glukhovskii (interview given at the London Book Fair, London, 12 April 2011).
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56. Aleksandr Ageev highlights the overlap of the novel's ideas with Tolstaia's 1992 article in The Guardian on Russian nationalism and her review of Elena Molokhovets's nineteenth-century cookbook, Podarok molodym khoziaikam (Kursk, 1861), which he believes inspired the multiple culinary references found in Kys'. Aleksandr Ageev, “Golod 45,” Russkii zhurnal, 2 August 2001, at old.russ.ru/krug/20010802.html(last accessed 31 May 2013). See Tatyana Tolstaya, “A Short Tour of the Russian Asylum,” The Guardian, 19 March 1992,25, and Tolstaia, Tat'iana, “Zolotoi vek,” Den': Lichnoe (Moscow, 2001), 450–68Google Scholar.
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61. Grant McMaster is the first international writer to join the project with Metro 2033: Britannia. His work tracks the adventures of Ewan, who survived the nuclear apocalypse in Glasgow's underground system.
62. The metro's first line opened on 14 May 1935, connecting Sokol'niki to Gor'kii Park.
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73. Here, Glukhovskii evokes Stalin's language (zhit’ stalo veselee) to emphasize the continued resonance of broken dreams. Glukhovskii, , Metro 2033, 94 Google Scholar.
74. Ibid., 502-6.
75. Glukhovskii explicitly expressed the belief that one “apocalypse” has already occurred in Russia with the loss of the Soviet system of values. Angus Kennedy interview with Dmitrii Glukhovskii.
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77. Moskoviada was first published in Ukrainian in 1993, a year after Omon Ra. Andrukhovych, Iurii, Moskoviada, trans. Brazhkina, A. (Moscow, 2001)Google Scholar.
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84. I use here the concept of the “heterotopia” as defined in spatial terms by Michel Foucault. Foucault, Michel, “Of Other Spaces,” trans. Miskowiec, Jay, Diacritics 16, no. 1 (Spring 1986): 22–27 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
85. In modern-day Moscow, the Filevskaia liniia has recently been extended, with new stations at Delovoi tsentr and Mezhdunarodnaia, facilitating access to the growing “Moscow-City” business district. Glukhovskii, however, envisages the opposite fate for this line, which is irradiated by its close proximity to the surface. He thus harks back to fears during World War II, when a Nazi bomb damaged Arbatskaia, and during the Cold War, when the line's effectiveness as a bomb shelter was queried. Glukhovskii, , Metro 2033, 11 Google Scholar. Baudrillard, , Selected Writings, 166 Google Scholar.
86. Baudrillard, , Selected Writings, 166 Google Scholar.
87. The metro map resembles Michel de Certeau's image of the modernist city from the viewpoint of the voyeur-god who treats the space as a totalized, mappable whole. From this elevated vantage point, momentum is arrested, time ceases, and historical complexities are transformed into a transparent, legible text. Certeau, Michel de, The Practice of Everyday Life, trans. Rendall, Steven (Berkeley, 1984), 91–110 Google Scholar.
88. Glukhovskii, , Metro 2033, 271–74, 431Google Scholar.
89. Ibid., 186.
90. Ibid., 14.
91. Ibid., 186.
92. Boym, , Future of Nostalgia, 49 Google Scholar.
93. Graham, Stephen and Marvin, Simon, Splintering Urbanism: Networked Infrastructures, Technological Mobilities and the Urban Condition (London, 2001)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
94. Brade, Isolde and Rudolph, Robert, “Moscow, the Global City? The Position of the Russian Capital within the European System of Metropolitan Areas,” Area 36, no. 1 (March 2004): 70 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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96. I use here J. G. Ballard's description of a postapocalyptic Pacific island. Ballard, J. G., “The Terminal Beach,” in Miller, Walter M. Jr. and Greenberg, Martin H., eds., Beyond Armageddon: Survivors of the Megawar (London, 1987), 129 Google Scholar.
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