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100% found this document useful (5 votes)
18 views168 pages

(Ebook) Remembering Leningrad: The Story of A Generation by Mary McAuley ISBN 9780299322533 Instant Download Full Chapters

Complete syllabus material: (Ebook) Remembering Leningrad : The Story of a Generation by Mary McAuley ISBN 9780299322533Available now. Covers essential areas of study with clarity, detail, and educational integrity.

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Remembering Leningrad
v
Remembering Leningrad
The Story of a Generation

Mary McAuley

The University of Wisconsin Press


The University of Wisconsin Press
1930 Monroe Street, 3rd Floor
Madison, Wisconsin 53711-2059
uwpress.wisc.edu

Gray’s Inn House, 127 Clerkenwell Road


London EC1R 5DB, United Kingdom
eurospanbookstore.com

Copyright © 2019
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
All rights reserved. Except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles and reviews,
no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any
format or by any means—digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—
or conveyed via the Internet or a website without written permission of the University of Wisconsin
Press. Rights inquiries should be directed to [email protected].

Printed in the United States of America

This book may be available in a digital edition.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: McAuley, Mary, author.


Title: Remembering Leningrad: the story of a generation / Mary McAuley.
Description: Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press, [2019]
Identifiers: LCCN 2018056728 | ISBN 9780299322502 (cloth: alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: Saint Petersburg (Russia)—Biography.| Saint Petersburg
(Russia)—History—1917– | McAuley, Mary.
Classification: LCC DK543 .M33 2019 | DDC 947/.21085—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018056728
Imagination and memory are but one
thing, which for diverse considerations
hath diverse names.
Thomas Hobbes
Contents

List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Dramatis Personae xiii

Prologue: Zhivkov’s Geranium 3

Part 1
Leningrad
From the Siege of 1941 to 1991

1 Stalin’s Children: The Leningraders 11


2 Stalin’s Children: Birds in Transit 31
3 Studying Labor Disputes in the 1960s 53
4 Zastoi or Stagnation, 1965 to 1985 62
5 Last Days of Leningrad 82

Part 2
St. Petersburg
A City Adrift, 1991 to 1994

6 The Political Background 111


7 An Apartment and a Telephone 118
8 The Market Wreaks Havoc 138
9 From the Caucasus to the Far North 154
10 Survival Strategies 183

vii
viii v Contents

Part 3
St. Petersburg
The New City, 1995 to 2017

11 Great Expectations . . . and Restoration 201


12 Farewell to St. Petersburg 220

Postscript 235
Illustrations

The city on the Finnish gulf 10


The boys from Petrogradskaya—Dima, El’mar, and
Volodya 18
The boys from Petrogradskaya—El’mar, Leva, and Yury 19
El’mar Sokolov 23
Leonid Romankov 26
Liuba Romankova 27
Celebrating the New Year on the Finnish gulf 29
Vera Kamyshnikova 36
Galina Lebedeva 36
Mary in the Botanical Garden 37
Vera, Galina, Ira, and Lilya outside Mytny 40
On the frozen Neva outside Mytny 44
Andrei Alexeev 86
Vasilevsky Island and Petrogradskaya Side 119
Andrei Alexeev in the North Caucasus Nature Reserve 157
Andrei, Mary, and Zina in the North Caucasus Nature
Reserve 159
Gennadi and Vilen on Lake Baikal 162
Anikeev, Vilen, Mary, and a driller at Anikeev’s place
on the Vilyui River 181
El’mar and Leva in Pskov countryside 188
Liuba and Leonid Romankov 190
Mary celebrating ten years of the Ford Foundation Office 204
Boris Firsov 211
St. Petersburg city center 222
ix
Acknowledgments

Conversations, reminiscences, and letters need no references but diaries


and excerpts from published memoirs should have an acknowledgment.
El’mar’s autobiographical essay “В миру и наедине с собой” written in
the mid-nineties is available at http://samlib.ru/s/sokolow_e_w/memory
.shtml#_Toc42652481. My account of Andrei Alexeev’s actions and
thoughts in the period from 1960 to 1990 come from published and un-
published materials that were in his archive in the Institute of Sociology
in the 1990s. Many were subsequently published or republished (in
edited versions) in his Драматическая социология и социологическая
ауторефлексия, vol. 2 (St. Petersburg: Norma, 2003–2005); see in par-
ticular 438 and Из неопубликованных глав, vol. 1, 378–79. Both volumes
are available at http://www.socioprognoz.ru/publ.html?id=216. I have
his permission to include the occasional quote that does not appear in
the published edited materials.
Many of Vilen Ochakovsky’s comments are taken from his unpub-
lished manuscript “Выродок или Антигерой нашего времени 1955–1992”
and from a chapter in Alexeev, vol. 2 (cited above), 422–33, which in-
cludes a commentary by Gennadi Khoroshikh. Quotations by Liuba
Myasnikova appear in her “Блокада,” Звезда 9 (2012): 167–80, and in her
“Почему милые девушеи рвутся в науку,” in Из истории отечественной
науки (женщины-ученые в Физтехе) (St. Petersburg: Изд. Политехнич.
Университета, 2008), 120.
Parts of chapters 1 and 2 appeared in my “Дети Сталина: Ленинград
1960-х,” Социологичеслий журнал 4 (2005): 103–16; and some paragraphs
in chapter 7 in my Human Rights in Russia: Citizens and the State from
Perestroika to Putin (London: I. B. Tauris, 2015).
xi
xii v Acknowledgments

I use a modified Library of Congress system of transliteration in the


text, adopting -y for names ending in -ii and -yi. I use x in names such
as Alexander, Alexeev, and Felix in place of ks, and keep ye only for the
initial letter of a name (hence Yevgeny, Yeltsin). Where a name is already
well known in the west (e.g., Tolstoy, Herzen, Dostoevsky, Tchaikov­
sky), I use the usual spelling. All the translations are mine.

I make no claim that the characters you will meet are representative of
their generation, but from their actions, and from the letters and diaries
they wrote, they bring their peers and the city to life. I have included a
list of those who appear more than once, and they are there in the photo-
graphs, most of which come from my personal collection. I am grate-
ful to Alexandra Veselova, whom I commissioned to draw the maps.
Of course, the description is mine, the lens through which my friends,
acquaintances, and colleagues and Russia itself is viewed is that of an
English observer. My response to shopping in Prism, the Finnish super-
market on Vasilevsky Island, is not the same as Galina’s. This is my
Russia, not theirs. It is not written for my Russian friends, although it is
dedicated to them. A few may read it with interest, or wryly, or shake
their heads, and reflect on how their perceptions differ from mine.
To all those who read the manuscript at different stages—Catriona
Bass, Vladimir Gel’man, Rose Glickman, Patricia Harris, Oksana Ma­
my­rin, Marion McAuley, Gary Yershon—I am truly grateful for cor-
rections and comments. My sincere thanks to the three reviewers for
the University of Wisconsin Press, and to Gwen Walker, editor, whose
comments and suggestions persuaded me to make changes, to delete or
to add more details, to edit the style in places, and to think again about
potential readers.
I end with a special word of thanks to my seventeen-year-old grand-
son, Joe, who ended his page-long review with “There are two huge
gaping holes in the book however: 1) Zenit play in blue and white not
red and white 2) Your darling grandson Joe is not mentioned once.” I
have, I hasten to say, made the necessary corrections.
Dramatis Personae

This is a list of those who reappear more than once at different times
and in different contexts. It does not include those who appear only once,
not because they are less valued but because no reminder is needed.

El’mar and His School Friends (all born in 1932)

El’mar Sokolov (d. 2003), philosopher, lived in the Botanical Garden,


taught at the Herzen Institute, then the Institute of Culture; m. Al-
bina, son Andrei; m. Tamara, daughter Ekaterina
Vladimir (Volodya) Frolov (d. 2018), scientist, Technological Institute
Oleg Konrady (d. 2006), medical doctor
Lef (Leva) Osipov, medical doctor; m. included to Valya, daughter Masha,
and to Gabriella
Dmitry (Dima) Glebovsky, chemist, St. Petersburg University
Yury (Yura) Smirnov (d. 2004), scientist, Technological Institute

Other St. Petersburg Friends and Colleagues


Who Appear First in the 1960s

Vera Kamyshnikova (Fedotova) (b. 1937), history student, Leningrad Univer-


sity, then teacher in Sakhalin, in Tambov, and retired to St. Peters-
burg; daughter Olga
Galina Lebedeva (b. 1937), history student, then graduate student in Byzan-
tine history, professor, history faculty, Leningrad–St. Petersburg
University

xiii
xiv v Dramatis Personae

Leonid and Liuba, the Romankov twins (b. 1937), both scientists; Leonid
was elected to the City Council from 1990 to 2002 and Liuba Myasni­
kova continues to hold a research position at the Ioffe Phys-tech
Institute, Academy of Sciences
Alexander Stepanovich Pashkov (1921–96), chair, Labor Law Department,
Law Faculty, Leningrad University in the 1960s, then director of the
Labor Relations Centre, Bobrinsky Palace
Vladimir Yadov (1929–2015), sociologist, Leningrad University, then the
Institute of Social and Economic Problems, Leningrad; in 1989
moved to head the Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences,
Moscow

Friends and Colleagues from the 1980s and 1990s

Andrei Alexeev (1934–2017), journalist, lathe operator, sociologist; m. Zina


Boris Firsov (b. 1929), district party secretary, head of Leningrad TV,
sociologist, director of the St. Petersburg Institute of Sociology,
Academy of Sciences, then founder and rector of the European Uni-
versity at St. Petersburg; m. Galina
Vilen Ochakovsky (b. 1937), journalist, Komsomol activist in Yakutia,
Ukrainian miner, detained in a psychiatric hospital 1982–86
Vitaly Startsev (1931–2000), historian, Institute of History, Academy of
Sciences, then Herzen University
Remembering Leningrad
v
Prologue
Zhivkov’s Geranium

I am very sad,” said seventy-something Galina Yevgenevna.“Zhivkov’s


geranium has died.” It was 2014. We were having our weekly tele-
phone call. She, standing at the kitchen window of her St. Petersburg
apartment, was looking out at the courtyard, its children’s playground
and the tall ash trees to which the cawing black-headed crows return
each evening at six o’clock. I, at my study window in Blooms­bury, looked
across the street at the Edwardian mansion block, its spikes to keep the
pigeons from laying eggs on the balconies. Our windowsills share some
of the same plants. Hers have the edge in light and sun. But now Zhiv­
kov’s geranium, brought to Leningrad more than fifty years ago by a
Bulgarian graduate student, had drooped and died. “Don’t worry,” I said.
“Although mine rarely flowers, I’ll bring a cutting on my next visit.” And
a year later, as though happy to be back, the geranium on her window-
sill in St. Petersburg was producing fronds of little blue flowers.
There are threads, some short, some longer, some with knots, which
link thoughts of today with memories of the past. A telephone conver-
sation, a chance meeting, a place or an old photo tugs a long-forgotten
incident, shelved somewhere in memory, back into the present. What
did that conversation bring back?
In 1961 Galina Yevgenevna and I lived on the same floor of a student
hostel, four to a room, across the river from the Winter Palace, the home

3
4 v Prologue

of the Hermitage. The view from our fifth-floor windows, particularly


when the evening sun caught the palace windows and burnished them
golden, was spectacular. Dina, from Sofia, lived there too. She had pre-
viously had a work assignment in the office of Todor Zhivkov, first sec-
retary of the Bulgarian Communist Party and head of government from
1954 to 1989. Zhivkov, remarkably long-lived, believed that geraniums,
with a strong camphor scent, were good for the heart. His office was full
of them, and one day Dina, finding herself alone there, took cuttings.
She brought these with her to Leningrad—as the city was known from
1924 to 1991—to the hostel, and thence to Galina. Since then Zhivkov’s
geranium has accompanied the two of us during our more than fifty
years of friendship.
Galina, a final-year student in the medieval history department at
Leningrad University, was from Tula, a town famous before the revo-
lution for its samovars. I was a visiting graduate student from Oxford,
writing a thesis on labor disputes, attached to the university’s law faculty.
I was busy with visits to factories and courts. No “politics” or “sociology”
was taught then; one might add that there was no sociology at Oxford.
By 1992 Leningrad was again St. Petersburg, Galina was a profes-
sor in Byzantine studies at St. Petersburg University, I was on research
leave from my Oxford college and attached to a new Institute of Sociol-
ogy in St. Petersburg, studying the dramatic political change engulfing
the country. Galina had privatized her well-built postwar apartment on
Vasilevsky Island and, with her help, I had bought a two-room apart-
ment in a 1970s “cooperative block.” Or had I? Not quite clear. But,
owner or not, I was now living just off Sredny Prospect, almost in the
middle of the island, but with a feeling of openness and being near the
sea. Zhivkov’s geranium took its place on my windowsill, followed me a
few years later to Moscow, and from there in 2002 to London. When
Galina visited, she could always find her way back to my Bloomsbury
apartment, she said, by looking for its window box. It reminded her of
the flowerpot whose presence on a windowsill, in the famous Russian
TV serial of the 1970s, Seventeen Moments of Spring, starring Vyacheslav
Tikhonov as a Soviet spy in Germany in the Second World War, indi-
cated that it was safe to visit.
Prologue v 5

In 2016 we were in a hospital on the outskirts of the city. Galina had


an appointment for a checkup. We collected blue plastic shoe bags at
reception—we put them on over our boots—negotiated the stairs and
lift, and sat down to wait. Dmitry Ivanovich, a young doctor in a white
coat, invited her in. I thought of the time in 1961 when I had found my-
self in the “Sverdlovka,” the hospital for Old Bolsheviks, and an object
of great interest to the doctors and to elderly patients walking up and
down the corridors in their pyjamas. After all, they had never seen an
English person before—and the English are known to be prim or stuck-
up (choporny). I felt terrible but somehow I must not be stuck-up. In the
pages that follow you will hear the term used more than once. Not this
time, though, when Galina and Dmitry Ivanovich came out together,
and Galina, smiling, holding his arm, introduced me. “This,” she said,
“is Mary, whom I told you about, a professor from Oxford, we’ve been
friends for more than fifty years.” So, for the reader who wants to know
what lies ahead, this is the story of a friendship. But it’s not only that.
It’s the story of a city, St. Petersburg, told through the memories and
experiences of a particular generation.
For whom am I writing? Primarily for younger readers, for those
who are studying or interested in Russia. For them I offer a past and
present, an everyday history to accompany the more serious books they
read about the city. Perhaps I can tempt them to make a visit. But it is
also for those from the west who spent time in the city when it was still
Leningrad, or who arrived in St. Petersburg in the turbulent nineties.
For them it offers an opportunity to place themselves, and their experi-
ences, within a narrative that starts with the blockade of 1941 and ends
today. And, finally, it’s for the curious traveler, about to visit the city for
the first time.
But how to tell the story of the city’s transformation, of its several
transformations since the Second World War, how to give the visitor of
today a grounding, a sense of where the city and its people are coming
from? I may have lived in Leningrad in the early sixties and in St. Pe-
tersburg in the early nineties; I may have made more visits than I can
remember—research visits starting in the late seventies; visits to intro-
duce students or children to the city in the eighties; then, as the nineties
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