Project description - St. Petersburg / Leningrad: Narration - History - Present

Project leader: Prof. Pekka Pesonen, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 24, 00014 University of Helsinki, tel. +358 (0)9 -19122987, fax +358 (0)9 - 19122974, pekka.pesonen(at)helsinki.fiwww.helsinki.fi/~pjpesone

The project is an interdisciplinary research program focusing on the contemporary culture of St. Petersburg, which has gone through major transitions in recent years. St. Petersburg culture is explored from the point of view of different fields of art with a special emphasis on the relationship between high culture, popular culture and everyday life. The long highly elaborate tradition of St. Petersburg culture, the stages of its evolution under different historical circumstances - often with abrupt changes - serve as a starting point for the research project.

Background of the Research Project

The following projects serve as a basis, framework and springboard for the new project:

Modernism and Postmodernism in Russian Literature and Culture (1995-2002)
(www.helsinki.fi/~pjpesone/Pomot/mopot.htm)

Narration and History: Turn of the Century in Russian Culture (2002-2004)
www.slav.helsinki.fi/narration_and_history/index.html

The above projects have up till now generated more than 100 scientific publications and 15 doctoral dissertations. Doctoral candidates have been from Finland, Russia, Estonia and the U.S.A. The projects have incorporated a network of 20-30 internationally acknowledged scholars who have participated in the projects as visiting lecturers, supervisors or opponents. The established network forms the basis for the new project. In international evaluations the results of the above projects have been rated excellent. As a direct result of these projects, The Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures of the University of Helsinki is seen to be one of the most prominent research centres in 20th century Russian literature and culture.

Themes and Methods of Study

In the project St. Petersburg/ Leningrad, urban studies, interdisciplinary in their own right, are integrated with the approaches to the city applied in literary studies, semiotics, history studies, visual arts, music, sociology and popular culture. The starting point is the present, which is examined in the context of the tradition.

Cultural phenomena produced by the city of St. Petersburg have traditionally been investigated from the point of view of the St. Petersburg Myth and the so-called Petersburg Text. The Petersburg Text is a notion introduced by the structuralist movement during the second half of the 20th century, which relies to a great degree on the 19th century Russian literary tradition from Pushkin to Dostoyevsky. The image and myth of St. Petersburg represented in the Petersburg Text is conceived of as a whole, a single text comprised of a corpus of independent texts, which in various aspects defines the way St. Petersburg/ Leningrad is perceived and remythologised in 20th century Russian literature. According to the Petersburg Text, St. Petersburg is a dualistic, demonic city in which the fate of the city reflects not only the fate of its individual citizen, but also that of Russia, Europe and the world at large.

The aim of the St. Petersburg/ Leningrad Project is to elucidate the relationship between the classical interpretations of the city as conveyed in the Petersburg Text along with its mythological constructions, and contemporary St. Petersburg culture with the focus on the ways the present city generates new texts. In order to achieve such an aim it is necessary that literary studies and cultural studies be in constant dialogue with multidisciplinary urban studies, sociology and semiotics. This dialogue is a means to problematise in a new say the appropriateness of the application of the St. Petersburg Myth and Text in the study of contemporary culture. On the other hand, the approach guarantees that the meaning of historical tradition, essential for examining contemporary culture, is not ignored.

When examining the special features of St. Petersburg culture, one must investigate it in its relation to Moscow and Muscovite culture. The latter is traditionally conceived of as the embodiment of "authentic" Russian culture, whereas St. Petersburg is regarded as an intersection where Western and Eastern cultural traditions meet. St. Petersburg as the West is a truism, whose manifold manifestations have found their way into contemporary culture. However, it is a truism, whose content needs to be questioned. The notion of "otherness" is crucial in comprehending St. Petersburg culture, because St. Petersburg has always been defined as "the other" in the Russian context in its relationship to Moscow. As "the alien in our own midst" it has become the place for cultural communication par excellence. In contemporary culture "otherness" is actualised in the alternative, marginal and avant-garde nature of the cultural life of the city. Moreover, the same characteristics are indicative of the city's capacity to give rise to new texts as well as translate "alien" texts.

Concerning cultural evolution, the issue of centre and periphery is always actual. The Moscow-St. Petersburg axis has been dominated by the struggle for the position of the centre since the foundation of the city of St. Petersburg. Several aspects have been significant in the struggle: economics, prestige, connections to the East and West, as well as cultural individuality. Phenomena which have not been approved by the official culture have been marginalised within the culture. Under new circumstances rejected and persecuted phenomena have re-emerged from the periphery and appeared in the centre of the culture. The history of Russian culture can be seen as consisting of a series of revolutions, of explosions. Such a post-structuralistic view on cultural studies provides the main methodological tool for the studies included in the project.

The phenomena, which have been located on the boundary between the centre and periphery, have a significant role to play in the project. The St. Petersburg/ Leningrad andegraund, (the corresponding Muscovite phenomena is called underground) its history and different forms of manifestation together with the question how there are perceived from the present-day perspective are of special interest in the studies. The issues concerning the underground culture of today, the prerequisite of its existence and nature constitute an interesting field which has not been studied comprehensively to date. The underground culture of Leningrad in the 1950's -1970's was a dynamic periphery where new texts were actively produced as well as "alien" texts translated, but the very same peripheral position amounted to its weak structural coherence.

The speciality of St. Petersburg culture - rock lyrics of a literary nature - emanates from the underground culture. The examination of St. Petersburg popular culture focuses on this genre, which encompasses both modernist and postmodernist tradition at the same time as it reflects the present moment. Rock lyrics form an essential part in the depictions of the transformations that take place in everyday life. The idiosyncratic history of Russian rock from the 1970's is a reflection of the history of transition in present-day Russia.

Underground culture is investigated in its relation to "otherness" within a culture. Various cultural minorities, such as the culture of sexual minorities are analysed both as being opposed to the mainstream culture and as an independent entity of its own. The project is concerned with homosexual culture in the context of modernism and the present day by analysing literary texts and elucidating the ways in which culture generates new texts.

The culture of "otherness" is also considered from the point of view of gender studies. The analyses of literary texts focus on Russian women writers, both on their prose works and poetry. The gender issue is not viewed solely from the feminine perspective, but attention is paid to comparative manifestations of gender in contemporary literature. The texts to be studied embrace the most recent St. Petersburg literature, though the relationship of the present to tradition is not forgotten. The latter aspect manifests itself, for example, in the examination of wartime lyric works from the vantage point of the present moment, which provides a new perspective to the most mythologised and painful periods in the history of the city. Contemporary literature deconstructs the old myths. The process of deconstruction as well as the new mythologies, which appear in this process, are central issues in the studies devoted to contemporary literature.

Inasmuch as one of the main aims of the project is to pose questions concerning the meaning and position of the Petersburg Text in Russian culture in a new light, emphasis will be placed on intersemiosis, the interactive nature of different arts. The research project will broaden its scope by proceeding from the concept of intertextuality - the Petersburg Text being central here - to the examination of interaction between different forms of arts. The mutual relationships between literature and visual art, literature and music, high and popular culture, are issues that will be treated with a special focus on the border between them, i.e. the very point where the translation of texts from one cultural language to another takes place.

Both high as well as popular culture are viewed as texts with a language of their own and with their own connections to tradition. Different forms of culture are explored through dialogue with each other. St. Petersburg contemporary art, literature as well as the variety of forms of popular culture are analysed both as constituents of the St. Petersburg mainstream culture as well as marginal phenomena as regards Russianness and Europeanness at large. The dualism inherent in the St. Petersburg myth is manifested in a concrete way in the still persisting dichotomy "classical St. Petersburg vs. Soviet Leningrad", as well as in the conflict between public and private space. The most recent proof of this dualism is the controversy over the celebration of the 300th  anniversary of St. Petersburg, which is examined through the polemics it provoked in the Russian press.

The everyday life and its connection to the Soviet period is investigated by means of the Russian "kommunalka" (communal apartment), its history and the texts which owe their appearance to this peculiarly Russian phenomena. This issue is approached from both the sociological and the literary point of view. Since the leading St. Petersburg scholars contribute to the study of "kommunalka", the approach will include semiotic elements, too.

The main objects of study of the project can be summarised as follows:

  1. The Petersburg Text of Russian literature from Bitov and Brodsky to the most recent texts in St. Petersburg literature
  2. St. Petersburg andegraund in literature and the visual arts
  3. St. Petersburg rock texts
  4. St. Petersburg cultural press - both official and unofficial
  5. St. Petersburg cultural minorities, manifestations of gay culture in particular from the turn of the 20th century to the present day (literature, visual arts, press, and clubs)
  6. "Narratives" of history about St. Petersburg/Leningrad and their transformations
    in different times from the vantage point of the present - a comparative analysis of
    literary texts, memoirs and historiography
  7. St. Petersburg housing culture - "kommunalka" past and present
  8. St. Petersburg semiotics of city culture
  9. 300th Anniversary of St. Petersburg as a Petersburg Text (plans, realisations,
    critics)

The methodological approaches in this interdisciplinary project range from the analysis of a literary text to approaches applied in the studies of cultural history and sociology. What is common to the studies carried out within the project is that they all tend to link a historical approach to text analysis in the broad sense of the word. The notion of the Petersburg Text serves as a starting point in many of the studies - it forms the theoretical basis and also functions as a notion whose relevance is questioned and tested in new contexts. The semiotic approach is neither the defining nor the dominating factor, notwithstanding its apparent presence in most  of the individual studies in the project and the fact that the overall approach of the project is to examine the transformation of St. Petersburg culture and everyday life through analysing signs and symbols.

The purpose of the project is to produce studies as concrete results of the international cooperation between younger and senior scholars from different fields, studies that elucidate the present St. Petersburg culture and everyday life in the context of their traditions. Tradition is investigated from the perspective of new interpretations: literary, visual, musical as well as texts from everyday life are seen as interpreting texts. The emphasis will be on the present as well as on the relationship of the past to the present, covering the Soviet period and its cultural heritage in particular. Adopting and interpreting Western culture constitutes an essential part of St. Petersburg cultural identity. The relationship of what is one's "own" and what is "alien", and the adoption of what is extraneous so that it becomes one's "own" forms the core approach of the project.

The stereotypical images invoked by St. Petersburg engage a whole range of paradoxes which are connected to the "other" and "alien" nature of the city in its relation to Russian culture in its entirety. This also applies to definitions of St. Petersburg from within the city boundaries. The project tries to clarify how the definition of St. Petersburg as a city is dependent on the texts that it generates. The aim of the project is to illustrate the cultural self-understanding of the city by challenging the St. Petersburg Myth and the Petersburg Text. The reinterpretations will be the result of a multidisciplinary approach to the arts and their interaction with the surrounding society.    
 
National and International Cooperation

The "St. Petersburg/Leningrad: Narration - History - Present" project is complemented by an international scholarly network already formed by the previously mentioned projects "Modernism and Postmodernism" and "History and Narration". Following a tradition established in these projects, members of the scholarly network will join the project as visiting lecturers, commentators in seminars, academic supervisors and opponents and, naturally, as speakers and participants of the various seminars and publications. The main national and international contacts are presented briefly in the following. This list only includes researchers who have provided written consent to take part in the scholarly network of the project.

Professor Pekka Pesonen, University of Helsinki, Finland
The project leader. He will supervise the project, its post-doctoral research and dissertations, and be responsible for co-ordinating the international network of scholars, and the project's seminars and publications. His research interests, largely conducted as part of his official post as university professor, are: A) St. Petersburg in Russian literature. A full-scale monograph on the subject in Finnish, which he has already worked on for several years. He has also given several series of lectures and over 20 academic and popular lectures on the subject in 2003. B) Articles on the Petersburg Text of contemporary Russian literature and its background of ideas.

- Professor Elena Hellberg-Hirn, University of Helsinki, Finland
- Doc., PhD Ben Hellman, University of Helsinki, Finland
- Professor Peeter Torop, University of Tartu, Estonia
- Professor Aleksandr Dolinin, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
- Professor Andrei Zorin, Russia State Humanitarian University (RGGU), Moscow, Russia
- Professor Grigori Kaganov, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Dr. Alexandra Smith, Senior Lecturer, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
- Professor Ievgenii Bershtein, Reid University, USA
- Professor Sven Spieker, University of Southern California, Santa Barbara, USA
- Doc., PhD Marina Maguidovich, Centre for the Sociology of Art, St. Petersburg, Russia
- PhD, writer and critic Mikhail Berg, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Senior Researcher Albin Konechnyi, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Dr. Ilia Utekhin, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Dr. Sofia Tchouikina, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia
- Dr. Katerina Gerasimova, European University, St. Petersburg, Russia

Postgraduate and postdoctoral studies

The project is funding for three postdoctoral researchers and two postgraduate researchers. In addition, one researcher will take part in the project as part of his official duties as Assistant of Russian Literature in the Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures. In addition to the Finnish researchers, one Russian scholar will receive his funding through CIMO. Apart from the researchers presented here, the project aims to engage other Russian and possibly American researchers. Their funding is not clear yet and therefore not mentioned here.

In addition to the actual research being completed under the auspices of the project, it will have an extremely positive effect on the study of Russian literature at the University of Helsinki as a whole. MA theses ranging from the St. Petersburg classics to the rock lyrics of the city are constantly being written in the Department. Lectures and workshops on these subjects will be given both by the Department's own and the project's guest researchers and teachers. Research on the central for Russian culture thematics of St. Petersburg / Leningrad will be spurred and supported, for instance, by increased supervision at all levels, from MA theses to postdoctoral studies. In addition to the international network of scholars, the project's Finnish postdoctoral researchers will supervise MA theses and dissertations. Judging from the aforementioned earlier projects, this kind of cooperation between more senior and younger scholars will be highly valuable and productive.

Postdoctoral researchers

Maija Könönen, Ph.D.  Notes of a Madman as a Petersburg Genre in Russian Literature
Having defended her excellent dissertation on Joseph Brodsky's Petersburg in 2003.  Dr. Könönen will now focus on the thematics of madness in Russian literature, ranging from the 1800s to contemporary literature. She has given lectures on the subject in the academic year 2003-2004. The study focuses on works dealing with madness with a first-person narrative - a confessional genre, the origin of which is rooted in the Petersburg myth. Madness is conceived of as a conflict between the inner reality of the author/hero and the surrounding reality. The genre is treated as a conscious attempt to construct an identity for "the other" - the madman, taking into account the specifically Russian "holy fools". The emphasis is put on contemporary literature.

Hanna Ruutu, MA Postmodernist Classicism
Ms Ruutu is currently completing her dissertation in the Finnish Graduate School for Literary Studies. After her doctoral defence, planned for early 2005, she will conduct postdoctoral research on classical subtexts in the postmodernist poetry of St. Petersburg. With the time span of the examined material ranging from the 60s to present-day poetry, her work will focus on the Petersburg poets' rewriting of classical material, some writers drawing still on modernism and others breaking the tradition.

Tomi Huttunen, Lic.Phil. Petersburg Rock Text
Mr Huttunen is at present finishing his dissertation as Assistant of the Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures at the University of Helsinki. He will conduct in this post a post-doctoral study on the tradition of the Petersburg rock text and its literary roots. Material for the research is provided by song lyrics from the 1970s to the 1990s, ranging from Boris Grebenshchikov and Iuri Shevchuk to the most recent rock lyrics of St. Petersburg. Mr. Huttunen will also be the project's coordinator.

Stanislav Savitski, Ph.D. The Past Progressive: Modernisation of St. Petersburg and Cultural Mythologies of Leningrad
Dr. Savitski defended his dissertation on the St. Petersburgian andegraund in 2002  at the University of Helsinki. His postdoctoral research continues the same theme focusing on the mythologies of St. Petersburg / Leningrad, using both underground-texts and various subsequent memoirs. Dr. Savitski is an important link between the project's Finland-based participants and the current St. Petersburg culture. In addition, he is also a prolific critic of literature, arts and music.
Postgraduate students

Ulla Hakanen, MA Gender, city and literature - the Petersburg text and gender in contemporary Russian prose
Mari Raami, MA  Confessional writing as a part of Petersburg text: A comparative study of Olga Berggol'c wartime works
Elena Stafeva, MA  (Moscow State Humanitarian University) Brodsky's creation ot the period before emigration (1957-1972) in the context of the Soviet underground culture

Seminars and Publications

The project will host two extensive international conferences, in the years 2004 and 2007. In addition, smaller workshops will be organised each year. The project's participants will take part in several international conferences and organise sessions and panels in them. For instance, the yearly conferences of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages, the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies, and the World Congress of the International Council for East European Studies, to be held in Germany in 2005, are the most important international conferences in this field.

Expected Results

Within the project, 3 dissertations by Finnish postgraduate students and 1-3 by foreign post-graduate students are due to be completed. In addition, 2-4 monographs by the project leader and the postdoctoral researchers are planned to be published. Furthermore, two joint publications from conferences and a large number of studies from the international network of scholars are expected. The results of the research completed within the project will be published in international publications, both scientific and popular.

In view of the popularisation of scholarship, several members of the project and its scholarly network have close contacts with Russian and American journals, the press and other media. Some of them contribute regularly, for instance, to the leading journal of St. Petersburg contemporary art, Novyi mir iskusstva. Apart from international journals, the results of the project will also appear in the Finnish press and other media. The project leader has thirty years experience of cooperation with radio and television, and several of the younger researchers have been active in this field in recent years.

The project will also have a considerable impact on the teaching of the Department of Slavonic and Baltic Languages and Literatures. In addition to a substantial increase in the ongoing lecture courses offered by the Department, even more contemporary forms of teaching will be supported. For instance, the Russian and English internet teaching material The Russian Mosaic: Introductions in Russian culture (www.slav.helsinki.fi/kurssit/mosaiikki) will be developed further. The members of the project will, for instance, complete the sections on the St. Petersburg culture and contemporary Russian culture on the website.


Viimeksi muokattu 14.11.2007

Lisätietoja

Ohjelmapäällikkönä toimi Mikko Ylikangas.