Sunday, March 27, 2022

The Bubbas Karamazov - weekly column, 27 March 2022

 

Lawrence Hall, HSG

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

The Bubbas Karamazov

 

This is the beauty of a free and open society, that is to say, there is no place for government censorship of the arts.

 

-Robert Hanna, City Manager, Abilene, Texas

 

When Russian bombs began falling on Ukraine some of the school curricula interrupted would have included Russian authors, censored not by the Ukrainian government but by Russian bombers.

 

State censorship has always been a feature of Russian governments. The Czars, the Soviets, and now the Kleptocrats feel that most people are nothing more than economic functions whose only purpose is to work and pay taxes. Papa needs a bigger yacht, you know. If the said economic functions read books and poetry and newspapers they might start getting ideas, and ideas are dangerous.

 

One of the ironies of Dobby-the-House-Elf’s war is that while Russian art, music, and literature are not censored in Ukraine they are more and more censored in the West, that is, in Europe and the Americas.

 

An Italian university in Milano / Milan cancelled a lecture series on Dostoyevsky because, well, he’s a Russian. A dead Russian, but still a Russian. The city government of Firenze / Florence has received numerous demands that the statue of Dostoyevsky installed in the city only a few months ago be removed. So far the mayor, Dario Nardella, is standing firm in the matter.

 

Canada – and this is a surprise – has also succumbed to the Aunt Pittypat vapors. Pianist Alexander Malofeev, 20, has been dropped from his three engagements with Orchestre Symphonique de MontrĂ©al. The Vancouver Recital Society, too, weaseled out on an appearance by Malofeev.

 

So much for that “the true north strong and free” thing, eh.

 

England has banished the Bolshoi Ballet from its summer season.

 

Ireland has canceled Swan Lake.

 

But surely the U.S.A. stands tall against censorship, right? Nope. The Metropolitan Opera in New York has dropped soprano Anna Netrebko like a hot bowl of borscht. Who would have thought that Puccini and Verdi were a menace to truth, justice, and the American way?

 

However, there is a bright, shining star of defiance, and that is the Lone Star State.  You know, Texas, where all those anti-cultural rednecks, farmers, and oilmen (sniff) live and work.

 

A private enterprise arts group, The Russian Ballet Theatre, schedules frequent visits throughout the U.S.A., including McAllen, Beaumont, and Abilene. That “Russian” in the name has caused a problem for some.

 

The city manager of Abilene, Robert Hanna, though, is a stand-up American who said,

 

We encourage those who may not wish to attend the March 20th performance of Swan Lake by the Russian Ballet Theatre at the Abilene Convention Center to not attend. Those that wish to attend, should be free to do so. This is the beauty of a free and open society, that is to say, there is no place for government censorship of the arts.

 

I’d like to think that he then fired a cannon shot from the walls, but he probably didn’t.

 

Dobby-the-House-Elf is choking civilization in Russia and trying to do so in Ukraine. In Russia an individual can be arrested for calling the war a war, for carrying a blank sign, for using a wrong word, and for suggesting the mass-murder of thousands of people might not reflect the ideas of Pushkin, Dostoyevsky, Ahkmatova, Solzhenitsyn, Tsvetaeva (no, I can’t pronounce that, but she was one of many Russian writers canceled by mysterious deaths), Tolstoy, and other disharmonious elements.

 

In Russia, even Swan Lake has become anathema to Dobby, for when television and radio stations are shut down by the government the broadcasters play Tchaikovsky as their last act before the plug is pulled and the security services push the staff out into the streets (if they’re lucky).

 

Censorship is practiced by tyrannies, not by free nations. Perhaps folks in Milan, London, Dublin, Montreal, Vancouver, New York, and other cities where petty tyrants tell them what books and shows they may or may not read should see how little Abilene, Texas defends the freedom of the arts.

 

 

Milan censors Dostoyevsky’s study and in Florence, they want to unbolt his statue – The Observatorial

 

City of Abilene says anyone against Russian Ballet Theatre performance should ‘not attend' (msn.com)

 

A Russian pianist's shows are canceled, even though he condemns the war in Ukraine : NPR

 

Met Opera drops Anna Netrebko, the star soprano tied to Vladimir Putin : Deceptive Cadence : NPR

 

Don’t wage war against Russian scholars | The College Fix

 

The show can’t go on: Russian arts cancelled worldwide | Russia | The Guardian

 

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