Kozhevnikov, Alexei. Stalin's
Great Science: The Times and Adventures of Soviet Physicists. London:
Imperial College Press, 2004.
Agenda: to answer the question of how impressive scientific
and technological progress could exist under a regime which supressed the Western-type
democracy. A Lycenko case as a rhetorical example in Western Cold War studies
of Soviet science. Kojevnikov aims “to develop a less impaired view of the
history of Soviet science in its social, political, and ideological contexts.”
(xii)
“freedom of scientific discourse could maintained precisely
by keeping it separate from the much more dangerous discourse on political,
religious, and moral issues” (xiii)
!!! “Many of the Cold War ideological stereotypes were not
laid to rest with the end of the Cold War itself – in fact, they have survived
particularly well in the field of Soviet history and continue to underlie the
bulk of popular and professional literature in the field.” (xiii)
xvi: “a society that started with a pact between a
revolutionary ruling party and scientific experts ended up in their mutual –
and mutually self-destructive – alienation.”
Chapter 1: the role of applied research in the envisioned
and projected re-organization of Russian science; therefore the revolution – a great
opportunity for this. Russian academic loses contact with Western schools—emergence
of national forms of scholarly dialogue (new journals, e.g.). Development of a
new organization (‘mobilizational’ type) of research. Another context: a desire
of Russian scholars for academic autonomy and research institutions as a type
of research organization disassociated from universities and, hence, teaching
obligations. German model of research institute. Centralized effort in
scientific research. Soviet science born from these developments and debates of
the immediate pre-WWI and WWI time.
Chapter 2: an alliance between science and revolution. “As
the war and the attendant isolation of Russian science ended in 1921, the
foundation of a novel government-sponsored system of research and development was
already in place.” (23) Independence of universities, accent on research,
centralization (even monopolization) of a certain field, large
interdisciplinary projects with applied flavour. Bolsheviks have support from
scholars, but not from universities – part of the tendency. Optical industry as
an example of transformations that this alliance between pre-1917 scholars and
the revolution brought. Establishment of a new Soviet-style model of
industrialization and modernization which was driven by science and not market
(cf. the brothers Strugatsky). Scientists cooperate with the regime, because
their effort has now a much greater social impact than before or abroad.
Loren Graham has described the birth of the
characteristically Soviet system of research institutes as “the combination of
revolutionary innovation and international borrowing” (Graham 1975). The
present study shows that that formula needs to be modified. The new R&D
system was, true, a revolutionary innovation, but one that had started already
before the revolution itself and did not originate from a particular political
or ideological agenda of a revolutionary party. (44)
In chapter 3, Kojevnikov links revolutionary transformations
in Russia and the development of the theory of the expanding universe
(Aleksandr Friedmann). (FROM Wikipedia: Friedmann's work supports both theories
equally, so it was not until the detection of the cosmic microwave background
radiation that the steady state theory was abandoned in favor of the
current favorite Big Bang paradigm.) This chapter presents a case in which a
similar question can be answered with sufficient confidence. The case is that
of some revolutionary ideas applied to the description of the behavior of atoms
and electrons. (48) Kojevnikov argues that the idea of electrons’ freedom in
dense bodies came from leftist political language and social theory – the case
of Yakov Frenkel. (49)
Chapter 4 (mentions his own position as a scholar:
Back home, their advanced expertise was no longer needed, or
so at least sounded the message from political authorities in the new
post-communist Russia, who were busy devaluing science along with everything
else that their predecessors, the communist authorities, had seemed to value.
(74) )
An experience of Western travel funds (Rockfeller funding
and other sources) as very timely for Soviet theoretical physics.
Chapter 5 explores the biography of Piotr Kapitza before his
split with Beria. Chapter 6 looks at the Soviet atomic project: “The socialist
economy, with its centralized military-style management and an existing
tradition of big-science institutions, was perfectly suited for replicating the
Manhattan Project.” (127)
Chapter 7 discusses the fox-like character of Sergey
Vavilov, President of the Soviet Academy since 1945. “Vavilov’s case, though
unique, is also revealing, as it helps to understand Stalinism not simply as a
totalitarian dictatorship but as a society and a culture with specific rituals,
mores, and styles.” (184) Chapter 8 discusses in more detail this discursive
aspect of Soviet science. Five debates – biology, physiology, philosophy,
economics and linguistics. Anthropological approach to the study of rituals and
languages of the Soviet scholarship. Kritika
i samokritika. In chapter 9 Kojevnikov discusses why a similar ordeal never
happened to Soviet physics. He argues that it was due to bureaucratic intrigue
of Vavilov. Chapter 10 deals with the alternative of how to develop Soviet
science: through international collaboration (physicists) or in a relative
autonomy (Lysenko). Kozhevnikov takes the case of ‘collective excitations’, a
state of atomic interaction, a theory developed by Soviet physicists, to see
how ideas trespassed national border during the Cold War.
Chapter 11 Dialogues
about Knowledge and Power in Totalitarian Political Culture discusses how
scientists’ enter to power position in the Soviet society was negotiated through
Soviet political language. “This relationship was not stable, but rather
subject to negotiation and compromise, with terms that shifted over time. Politicians
and scientists were two privileged and mutually dependent elite groups in
Soviet society. The partners in this relationship, though of course not equal,
exerted influence upon each other. Politicians had a share in deciding on
matters related to science. At the same time, scientists had de facto access to
political decision making, although the nature of this access was not easy to
formulate in acceptable Soviet political language.” (276) Kozhevnikov makes an
excellent discourse analysis (or even conceptual analysis in a form a-la
Koselleck) of concepts of power and knowledge in the Soviet society. Discusses
the imagined Party as the bearer of Power (not impossible to be described vis-à-vis
real party); then: “Even in the world of communist dreams, however, the ideal
Party was not expected to command the third kind of higher knowledge, knowledge
of the natural world. For this, Bolsheviks imagined a separate ideal agency,
which they called Science.” (281)
“Science as an ideal agency enjoyed a very high status in
the Bolshevik world, compared to that of Party, People, or Proletariat.
Bolsheviks knew that Party could not rule without relying on Science— in other
words, that Power depended on Knowledge. On the other hand, they insisted that
Science could not be separated from politics and ideology— in other words, that
Knowledge could not be independent of Power. These two symmetrical
epistemological theses were represented in the Bolsheviks’ language as the two
formulaic phrases about Science and Party quoted above.” (281) Mentions that
Purges led to the homogenizing of the social group of technical professionals.
Between 1917 and mid-1930s – a search for a model of
relationship between the party and the science. “The restoration of order,
hierarchy, and boundaries between science and politics meant a return to a
compromise between scientists and politicians— a compromise that can be called
the Stalinist pact. This restored relationship has often been characterized in
implicitly gendered terms. Soviet publications and statements pictured it as a
romantic (but traditional) partnership between Party and Science. The former
provided support and leadership, while the latter responded with devotion and
assistance, with the two inseparably tied together by true and mutual love.”
(290) Traces this relationship through the work on the Bomb to Sakharov with
his political activism. He uses the example of Sakharov to, actually, discuss the
end of this tacit and cordial alliance between science and party and to chart
the beginning of their dissociation.
No comments:
Post a Comment