Friday, October 03, 2014

Solzhenitsyn Spat in Moscow

Wikicommons - Solzhenitsyn, pictured in 1974, when he was stripped of his Soviet citizenship and deported from the country.

As Moscow's weather gradually cools down, the temperature of political discourse is definitely heating up.
A public spat over the place in history of novelist and historian Alexander Solzhenitsyn led last week to some fighting words that culminated with a popular actor, Yevgeny Mironov, slinging rhetorical mud at a prominent editor and writer, Yury Polyakov, and drawing cheers from many for the deed.
"Bravo, Yevgeny Mironov! Bravo!" wrote theater critic, historian and translator Pavel Rudnev on his Facebook page on Saturday.

Wikicommons - Actor Mironov defended him. 


Calling Mironov's salvo a "first sign" of change, Rudnev added, "I hope that the actor's word will melt the conspiracy of silence among the leading figures of Russian theater in regards to what is happening in the country, and primarily, in culture. Everybody is silent. They see and they are silent. Lev Dodin alone has spoken out against censorship. He alone."
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