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“The Dialectics of Nature in Kara-Kum”: Andrei Platonov’s Dzhan as the Environmental History of a Future Utopia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

In the Soviet cultural geography of the early 1930s, the Kara-Kum desert of Turkmenistan–the setting of Andrei Platonov's novella Dzhan–represented an environmental challenge to Soviet technological utopianism, just as its nomadic inhabitants challenged Stalinist narratives of political development. In this article, I offer new contexts for reading Dzhan, locating it within Russian and Soviet discourses of natural and national development and within the context of Platonov's second profession as a meliorator (land reclamation engineer). I argue that Dzhan offers a vision of vernacular socialism, first, in its attention to the specific ecology of the desert and its inhabitants, and second, in its resistance to two totalizing Soviet master narratives forming in the early 1930s: in the political domain, new Stalinist doctrine on modes of production, and in the literary domain, the socialist realist plot.

Type
Platonov's Turkmenia
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2014

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References

1. A. G. Gael', “Otbrosif nazad chernye peski Kara-Kuma,” Pravda, 25 September 1933. Turkmenistan was the last of the five Central Asian republics to be brought under full Soviet political control; only in early 1933, the year of the Moscow-Kara-Kum-Moscow rally, was the Turkmen leader of the “basmachi,” Dzhunaid Khan, driven from the Soviet Union.

2. Among the many works published on the Kara-Kum expedition were poet Mikhail Loskutov's Trinadtsatyi karavan: Zapiski o pustyne Karakum (Moscow, 1933) and his children's book, Rasskazy o dorogakh (Moscow, 1935); S. Urnis's children's book Kara-Kum:Rasskaz o probege (Moscow, 1934); and El'-Registan and L. Brontman's Moskva-Kara- Kum-Moskva (Moscow, 1934). Roman Karmen and Eduard Tisse's film of the expedition is Avtoprobeg Moskva-Karakumy-Moskva (1933).

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40. Ibid.

41. Engels, Friedrich, Dialectics of Nature, trans. Clemens Dutt (New York, 1940), 291–92.Google Scholar

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47. Ibid.

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49. Significantly, Platonov omits from discussion Chingis Khan, whose complete ruin of Khorezm in the early thirteenth century was notoriously brutal and who was commonly associated with the destruction of irrigation systems in Asia.

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51. Yarshater, Ehsan, “Iran: iii. Traditional History,” Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. 13, fasc. 3 (London, 2004), 303–6.Google Scholar

52. In his works on the multiethnic Turkmen SSR, Platonov discusses the nomadic ethnic Turkmens surprisingly infrequently and with some ambivalence.

53. Platonov, Andrei, “Dzhan,” in Platonov, A., Proza (Moscow, 1999), 458.Google Scholar

54. Ibid., 502.

55. Platonov, “O pervoi sotsialisticheskoi tragedii,” 641.

56. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 484–85.

57. Ibid., 494.

58. Ibid., 461.

59. Ibid., 500.

60. Ibid., 472-73.

61. Ibid., 473.

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63. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 477.

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67. Platonov, “Goriachaia Arktika,” 172.

68. Platonov, , “Voprosy sel'skokhoziastva v kitaiskom zemledelii,” Sochineniia, Vol. 1, bk. 2,236.Google Scholar While Platonov's suggestion may have a hint of satire, as I discuss elsewhere, it is consonant with Marx's concept of social metabolism, based on the reciprocal exchange of minerals between city and country in the form of waste and food.

69. Paperny, Vladimir, Kul'tura dva (Ann Arbor, Mich., 1985), 142–45Google Scholar; Paperny, , “Men, Women, and the Living Space,” in Brumfield, William Craft and Ruble, Blair A., eds., Russian Housing in the Modern Age: Design and Social History (Cambridge, Eng., 1993), 166–68.Google Scholar

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74. The five progressive stages of socioeconomic development in the piatichlenka were primitive-communal, slaveholding, feudal, capitalist, and socialist. Those who believed the AMP was a legitimate mode of production were known as the aziatchiki.

75. Sawer, Marxism and the Question of the Asiatic Mode of Production, 52. The Asiatic mode of production was “revived” in 1964.

76. These historiographical shifts are traced in Tillett, Lowell R., The Great Friendship: Soviet Historians on the Non-Russian Nationalities (Chapel Hill, 1969).Google Scholar

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81. Paperny, “Men, Women, and the Living Space,” 168.

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85. A. Miretskii, “Segodnia i zavtra v Karakumskii pustyni,” 4. Decades-long construction of the Kara-Kum Canal began in 1954. It is one of the major causes of the Aral Sea's desiccation. See Orlovsky, Nikolai S., “Creeping Environmental Changes in the Karakum Canal's Zone of Impact,” in Glantz, Michael H., ed., Creeping Environmental Problems and Sustainable Development in the Aral Sea Basin (Cambridge, Eng., 1999), 225–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

86. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 452.

87. Ibid.

88. Ibid., 505. Bais, in Central Asia, referred to rich peasants, i.e., kulaks.

89. Ibid., 476-77.

90. Gellner, Ernest, foreword to Khazanov, Anatoly M., Nomads and the Outside World (Madison, 1994), xi.Google Scholar

91. Ibid., x. Emphasis in original.

92. Platonov, “Goriachaia Arktika,” 170.

93. Ibid., 171.I am grateful to Alexander Nakhimovsky for a helpful discussion on Platonov's meaning in this passage.

94. Ibid. A takyr is a clayey, saline soil formation with limited vegetation found in ancient river deltas throughout Central Asia. Takyrs retain water because of their high clay content and are often used to water herd animals. For a brief description of a takyr, see Kharin, Nikolai, Vegetation Degradation in Central Asia under the Impact of Human Activities (Dordrecht, 2002), 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

95. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 490,452.

96. Platonov, “Goriachaia Arktika,” 171.

97. Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty, A Critique of Postcolonial Reason: Toward a History of the Vanishing Present (Cambridge, Mass., 1999), 93.Google Scholar

98. Platonov, “O pervoi sotsialisticheskoi tragedii,” 641.

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100. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 465.

101. Nazar also connotes spiritual or mystical vision in Sufi tradition. See Ismailov, Hamid, “Dzhan as a Sufi Treatise,” Essays in Poetics 26 (2001): 7282.Google Scholar

102. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 454.

103. Platonov, Zapisnye knizhki, 137.

104. Savkin, I. A., “Na storone Platona: Karsavin i Platonov, ili Ob odnoi ne-vstreche,“ in Kolesnikova, E. I., ed., Tvorchestvo Andreia Platonova: Issledovaniia i materialy, bk. 1 (St. Petersburg, 1995), 158–59.Google Scholar Savkin identifies the same nontraditional (i.e., “non- Platonic“) Utopian landscapes in the works of the writer Lev Platonovich Karsavin, playing throughout the essay with the alternation between the names Platon, Platonov, and Platonovich.

105. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 457.

106. Jameson, Fredric, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions (London, 2005), 399400.Google Scholar

107. Platonov, “Goriachaia Arktika,” 171.

108. Platonov, “Dzhan,” 467