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The Biopolitics of Stalinism: Ideology and Life in Soviet Socialism. By Sergei Prozorov . Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016. xiv, 337 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. ₤24.99, paper.

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The Biopolitics of Stalinism: Ideology and Life in Soviet Socialism. By Sergei Prozorov . Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2016. xiv, 337 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. ₤24.99, paper.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2017

Veli-Pekka Tynkkynen*
Affiliation:
Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2017 

“Did you know, Stalin was a hipster?” is printed on a T-shirt, together with a picture of young Iosif Dzhugashvili, and sold at a tourist shop in Moscow. It is very puzzling to see the communist leader responsible for the death of millions glorified in a contemporary Russia that is characterized by non-ideological political nihilism accompanied by “mindless consumerism and superstitious religiosity” (259), as described by Sergey Prozorov. His book is extremely useful for those trying to understand the nature of Stalin's terror and the whole Soviet-socialist enterprise, as well as the roots of rationality behind today's ideology-poor, imperialist-minded Russia. Typically, the Stalin era has been approached with concepts like totalitarianism, with many scholars finding little difference between Nazism and communism. Or, it has been looked from ideological and governance angles, stating that Stalin's terror is proof that socialism always leads to atrocities or rather that its implementation was just flawed, and thus the ideology should not be blamed. According to Prozorov, this has distorted the whole analysis of Russian political history.

Prozorov, an expert on Russian politics and history, proposes a different and, in my view, a very solid methodological tool to reveal the essence of the Soviet-socialist enterprise and Stalin's rule. By operationalizing the concept of biopolitics and leaning on the works of Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, and Roberto Esposito, Prozorov manages to unfold the specificities of Stalin's power. The main argument concerning the interpretation of Stalin's rule is that it was qualitatively very different from what we have come to think of as biopolitics. In the mainstream understanding of biopolitics, by which both liberal democracies and totalitarian Nazism have been analyzed, the core value of the rule has been to protect life: even the genocide of Jews by the Nazis was carried out to protect the alleged Aryan blood and form of life attached to it. Therefore, in other western examples of biopolitics, the societal danger has been linked to an excess protection of life. Stalin's biopolitics turned into thanatopolitics (politics of death), that is, into a total eradication of previous forms of life—a war on nature, human and physical.

Through theoretical elaborations on the interplay of ideology and form of life, as well as the empirical analysis of the Soviet and post-Soviet eras, Prozorov shows that Stalin's rule and its rehabilitation in contemporary Russia can be understood with the help of biopolitical analysis. Prozorov leans on secondary research material, thus the book does not contain any new archival data and may not interest hard-core historians. It is exactly because of this, however, that the book is brilliant: it is the author's approach, his specific methodology that is able to unveil how in Russia the relationship between the rulers and the people, and especially rulers' views about preferred and permitted forms of living, has evolved over the course of history. Moreover, all the efforts to de-Stalinize Russian society, both during the Soviet and post-Soviet eras, have failed precisely because the focus has been on ideology and implementation, rather than the place that political power has had vis-à-vis the people and their forms of life. Thus, the book demonstrates the logical path why in the 2010s many Russians continue to see Stalin as a patriotic and positive figure, and how Putin can be represented as Stalin's heir and as an “effective manager.” The valorization of Stalinism is not risk free for Putin's reign, however, as Putinism is not about transformation, as in Stalinism, but about preservation.

The book is not just about unveiling harmful practices, as many Foucauldian studies have been accused of, but about proposing new approaches to empower people. Prozorov proposes to battle the ideology-poor Russian society, since “(a) pure biopolitics ‘without ideas' is in fact a particularly powerful ideological construct” (256), with a tool he calls affirmative biopolitics. Hence, the idea (equity, sustainability) should not be imposed on people, as in Stalinism, but it should be diffused, as was the case with socialism in early 1920s Soviet Russia, with the help of affirmative biopolitics. Moreover, the biopolitical-emancipatory perspective can reveal, for example, how fragile the truth claims of neo-Stalinism under Putin's rule are. Thus, one should not be discouraged by the fact that in today's Russia it is exceptionally hard to influence politics and policies via rational arguments, as naked power prevails over rationality. The dangers of genuine re-Stalinization, however, might be the key to a positive transformation along the lines of affirmative biopolitics.