https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/c/internationalism-postcolonialism-rossen-djagalov

>From Internationalism to Postcolonialism by Rossen Djagalov
Revelatory study of cultural relations between the Soviet Union and the 
developing world during the cold war

Friday 18th Dec 2020


TRUE INTERNATIONALISM: US writer Langston Hughes was the most popular of the 
black authors read in the Soviet Union in the 1930s
DESPITE the somewhat misleading subtitle of Literature and Cinema between the 
Second and Third Worlds, this fascinating text largely centres on the cultural 
relationships between the Soviet Union and what Vijay Prashad has termed the 
“third-world project.”

As Djagalov notes in his foreword, modern-day professionals in the former 
socialist world rarely show any substantive interest in Soviet-era achievements 
because that’s not where the money is.

Artists in third-world nations themselves are all too often embarrassed by the 
Soviet support that effectively helped kick-start their careers in a period 
when they were largely unknown.

By no means an uncritical admirer of the neoliberal project, Djagalov main 
mainly focuses on the Afro-Asian Writers' Association (1958-1991) and the 
Tashkent Festival for African, Asia and Latin American Film (1968-1988) to 
explore the surprisingly fluid and dynamic two-way relationship that sadly came 
to an end with the collapse of the Soviet bloc.

Despite what many pro-imperialist narratives would have us believe, the whole 
school of socialist realism is not reducible to a crude, didactic and 
one-dimensional outlook. The Brechtian idea of art as not only something which 
reflects the human condition but also as a weapon with which to change it, has 
produced challenging, exciting and adventurous works.

Although many commentators assume that the best of Soviet art came to an end 
after briefly flourishing in the early 1920s, one of the key strengths of this 
book is that it ably demonstrates how literature and cinema continued to 
develop in ways that were experimental and innovatory, all the more so in the 
post-Stalin period .

Soviet support for the arts was by no means restricted to narrowly political 
agitprop.The massive effort that publishers like Progress and Raduga put into 
the distribution of countless, cheaply priced and beautifully produced classics 
of world literature — and, interestingly, not just ones drawn from the Russian 
and Soviet canon — helped put these into the hands of first-time readers 
worldwide.

Nowhere was this more so than in the underdeveloped South and a strong focus on 
the art and culture of Soviet Central Asia was also very deliberate. Since the 
Toilers in the East University (KUTV) was established in 1921, Soviet power had 
combatted Tsarist oppression, Great Russian chauvinism and feudal obscurantism 
through land reform, the struggle for women’s rights , health programmes and 
literacy campaigns.

Held up as a showcase to other oppressed nationalities, the gains for ordinary 
people were huge and nowhere more so than in the field of culture, where many 
writers were published not only for the first time but in their own language 
and often in written scripts that didn’t exist before the revolution.

The relationship between the Soviet Union and “third-world” countries ought not 
to be seen as a one-way affair either. According to the UN, the number of books 
read per year by the average Soviet citizen was one of the highest in the 
world, and hundreds of Asian, African and Latin American writers found a huge 
and appreciative audience there.

In cinema — an art form of which Lenin was quick to grasp the immense 
importance — “world cinema,” for want of a better term, is still seen as 
something as a novelty in the West. But throughout the Soviet era, showing 
films from countries like India was common to the extent that it was to become 
one of the latter’s major markets.

Of course, these cultural interchanges did have shortcomings and outright 
tensions . A lack of clarity about what was being supported, and on what basis, 
meant that quantity rather than quality sometimes took precedence, as did a 
tendency to support initiatives on the basis of good intentions alone.

Sometimes the Soviet approach was somewhat narrow and mechanical and cultural 
internationalism, as in politics, was cut short by less idealistic geopolitical 
interests.

And the Soviet Union had its competitors. During the period in which Maoism 
began to label the USSR as revisionist, if not fascist, many accepted China's 
claim to be the new revolutionary epicentre.

Even on a smaller scale, the role of Yugoslavia in the non-aligned movement 
made sure that Soviet influence was not always uncontested, however moderately.

Djagalov covers all of this and more in a work that is interesting, detailed 
and original. Hopefully, it will inspire similar studies in the near future.

>From Internationalism to Postcolonialism is published by McGill-Queen's 
>University Press, £27.95.

STEVE ANDREW


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