I just received an email from Russia that explains the peculiar workings of the book-publishing business in the country.
A single monster publisher has a monopoly on the book-publishing market. An author who wants to get published needs to pay an enormous bribe to the publishers. This is how things always are when you remove the capitalist competition for the consumers’ attention from the market.
A recent book fair in St. Petersburg concentrated on showcasing books and projects that promoted the creation of governmental bodies that would eradicate all ideas that departed from the party line. This is now said openly and nobody even tries to conceal these plans.
The state supports writers with grants. However, in order to get state support, you either need to denounce Jews all day long or collaborate with the secret service.
A recent state-sponsored poetry contest only accepted contributions that celebrated the occupation of the Crimea or promoted saccharine Orthodox religiosity. The quality of the poetry presented there was awful but nobody cares about small things like these any longer.
Putin invaded Ukraine in order to defend the Russian language and culture (from whom it is still not clear but whatever). Those of us who actually care about the preservation of the Russian language and culture can’t fail to see that the real danger to it stems from the current government of the Russian Federation.
Writers from Russia are sending these messages to foreigners because that’s their only way of being heard. Nobody in Russia (or Ukraine) speaks any language but their own, so there is an enormous sense of isolation from the world. At the moment, the entirety of the Russian intellectual life has been ghettoized on the Livejournal website. Livejournal is owned by one of Putin’s pocket oligarchs who obviously does what his master tells him to. Livejournal differs from WordPress or Blogspot in that it is next to impossible to leave a comment on a Livejournal blog if you are not a Livejournal subscriber. I think it’s important to help these dissenting voices to break through.