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It was a striking moment in the history of Russian dissidence. On December 27, 2013, three days after their release from remote penal colonies, Nadezhda  (known as Nadya) Tolokonnikova and Maria (known as Masha) Alyokhina were in a shiny Moscow TV studio, with Vladimir Bukovsky on the line from England. Bukovsky spent 12 years in Soviet prisons and psychiatric hospitals in the 1960s and 70s as punishment for repeated acts of public protest. Since his release in a prisoner swap in 1976, he has lived in Cambridge. In their TV press conference Tolokonnikova named Bukovsky as her hero: a true defender of human rights who never abandoned political activism. In her 21 months in prison, she had read and reread his autobiography, she said, leaving it as a precious gift to a fellow inmate on her release. In Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina Bukovsky recognised his own kind. The elderly dissident spoke with them naturally, as equals. He told them "from the heart" that he knew how hard it would be to adapt to life outside prison, that freedom would bring a mass of cares. He wished them luck. 

Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina have confronted the challenges of freedom with the same cool demeanour that they displayed during their trial and imprisonment. In their tour of Europe and the US in the days before the Sochi Winter Olympics, politicians, human rights activists and rock stars lined up to bask in their moral authority. The young women make a good double act but Tolokonnikova is the true performer. She combines beauty and charisma with a remarkable mind, and knows instinctively how to take the high ground. The Putin regime "did not just make Tolokonnikova a star, it turned her into a saint," the writer Dmitri Bykov said during her prison hunger strike. "She is now the best-known Russian after Putin himself."

To capture imaginations is to be caught up in other people's fantasies and vanities. On an Irish chat show, the hapless presenter told Tolokonnikova that Madonna had described Pussy Riot as "fellow freedom fighters". Incredulous for a moment, she threw back her head and laughed. Again, she explained (as she had done to the judge who sentenced her in July 2012 for "hooliganism motivated by religious hatred") that the "punk prayer", "Mother of God, Drive Away Putin", was not an attack on religion, but a political protest. Days later, at an Amnesty benefit in Brooklyn's vast Barclays Center, Madonna introduced Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina with a foul-mouthed speech about the dangers she herself had faced for the sake of freedom. In T-shirts decorated with the cross of the Teutonic knights, they thanked her graciously and proceeded to read aloud the court statements of Russia's May 6 prisoners, incarcerated for street protests since 2012.

Back home, Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina face a tougher crowd. Many believe they are in the pay of the West. More sympathetic members of the intelligentsia cannot reconcile the dazzling moral clarity and erudition of their court statements with the antics in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, never mind Tolokonnikova's participation (with her husband Petr Verzilov) in a notorious sex protest in the State Museum of Biology in 2008. Others wait for the magic to wear off. "Why is everyone so obsessed with those stupid girls?" the Moscow TV anchor and socialite Ksenia Sobchak reportedly complained.  

Other members of Pussy Riot have disowned Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina for succumbing to a cult of personality. Undeterred, the two showed up in Sochi in their Pussy Riot balaclavas. This is the kind of stubborn dissident persistence that Bukovsky taught. The local police obliged: they were first detained, then horsewhipped by Cossacks, creating another colourful spectacle for the assembled global media. They incorporated footage of it all into their song "Putin will teach you to love the Motherland".

In her excellent new book Words will Break Cement: The Passion of Pussy Riot (Granta Books, £9.99), Masha Gessen finds evidence enough of genius in the "punk prayer" itself, which she calls "a great work of art . . . a miracle". The dissident priest Gleb Yakunin regards the performance in the cathedral as a miracle in the full Christian sense of the word. Pussy Riot's words "black cassock, gold epaulettes" drove "to the very heart of Patriarch Kirill", he said. During their imprisonment, Yakunin composed a verse cycle in Pussy Riot's honour, The Pussiniad. He too did time in prisons and labour camps in the Soviet period. In 1993, five years after his amnesty, the Russian Orthodox Church excommunicated him for exposing its infiltration by the KGB. Yakunin had unmasked Kirill as a high-ranking agent codenamed Mikhailov.

"Passion, honesty and naivety are superior to hypocrisy, mendacity and false modesty that disguises crime," Tolokonnikova said in court. These are words for a dissident to live by. Yakunin considers Tolokonnikova a person graced with "exceptional gifts". He believes that once they have established their new human rights group, Justice Zone, she and Alyokhina will found a political party — a "genuine Christian democratic party" — that will drive out Putin and transform Russia. That really would be a miracle. 
 
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hegel`s advocate
March 17th, 2014
7:03 PM
Observer of the Scene is being `Chomsky` about all this and I am being `Zizek`. Unlike Chomsky at least Observer of the Scene voices an opinion on the subject. This opinion will never (?) see the 30 seconds of a Pussy Riot play/dramaturgy in the Moscow cathedral as a great work of (conceptual) art or miracle (as Masha Gessan does in her book about Pussy Riot. ) Once in Russia there was Malevich (Black Square painting) and the Suprematists and now there is Pussy Riot artists making 21st century feminist (art) history. To say Nadya is nothing special is to be Warholian `blank`. Look at English artist Stella Vine`s portrait of Pussy Riot (on her website) That`s as good as Zizek`s appreciation of Pussy Riot in his `The True Blasphemy`.The latter written when PR were thrown in jail and the former exhibited in London when they were freed. Some of my own `neo-Hogarthian` prints are on the Gothic Moon Records website.

Observer of the Scene
March 17th, 2014
10:03 AM
@billy bob @hegel's advocate 1) I don't like Putin. 2) I most definitely wouldn't want to live in Putin's Russia. 3) If the adolescent exhibitionist Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and her consoeurs had pulled their stunt in a British mosque, they would have gone to jail under British crypto-religious hate laws. That's assuming they survived the review given their performance by adherents of the Religion of Peace. So forgive me if I don't see Russia as particularly oppressive in the way it treated this "dazzling" moral paragon. "To dismiss Nadezhda Tolokonnikova... is disgracefully facile... Tolokonnikova is brave, intelligent, cultured, and principled... shines like a beacon in today's cynical world." You sound like Melanie "Moral Clarity" Phillips on auto-pilot. Or even off it. "Nadya is Russia`s `Oscar Wilde`.Even Bob Geldof (on New York tv) says Pussy Riot are situationists. The UK equiv (intelligence and wit) is Julie Burchill." That's not like Mel P, tho'. Unless she's acquired a sense of humour and/or a satirical streak since I last looked. Oscar Wilde had taste, subtlety and wit, was not crude, exhibitionist or self-righteous, and is one of the great figures of European culture. Apart from that, I agree that he has much in common with Ms Tolokonnikova.

hegel`s advocate
March 14th, 2014
3:03 PM
Nice one,Billy Bob! Nick Cohen was at Chomski`s anti-empirical bollocks recently. So was Zizek. I`d like to see Julie Burchill and Camille Paglia enter the fray on this. And the people of Uruguay! To the tune of Iggy Pop`s `I Need More` (Youtube)

Billy Bob
March 13th, 2014
11:03 AM
To dismiss Nadezhda Tolokonnikova as an 'adolescent exhibitionist' (Observer of the Scene)is disgracefully facile. Tolokonnikova is brave, intelligent, cultured, and principled. Her refusal to capitulate in the face of the venal brutality to which she has been exposed shines like a beacon in today's cynical world and particularly so in Putin's Russia. Don't just observe that scene from your armchair and sneer.

hegel`s advocate
March 11th, 2014
6:03 PM
The witless, cynical nihilism/mediocrity of epigones TonyR and Observer of the Scene reveals their mere jealousy. Nadya is Russia`s `Oscar Wilde`.Even Bob Geldof (on New York tv) says Pussy Riot are situationists. The UK equiv (intelligence and wit) is Julie Burchill.

Observer of the Scene
March 11th, 2014
9:03 AM
An adolescent exhibitionist being praised by Standpoint. More proof that "neo-" is a privative prefix.

TonyR
March 10th, 2014
9:03 PM
"Pussy Riot are an art group not a rock band." I am well aware that they can neither sing nor play an instrument to any worthwhile artistic effect.

hegel`s advocate
March 8th, 2014
2:03 PM
Would that be a topless female skinhead band with I AM GOD written on their chests a la Femen or a female skinhead band wearing Pussy Riot aesthetic ? Pussy Riot are an art group not a rock band. Would the mosque in Bradford be a commercial and religious front used by Cameron/Clegg to stage nationally televised gruel-propaganda religio-political ceremonial unrealities in ? (As is the cathedral in Moscow). TonyR is being a false witness and asking unreal questions. That`s just bad philosophising on the subject.

TonyR
March 6th, 2014
9:03 PM
I would have thought it perfectly obvious that I am pointing out the irony of a judge imposing a sentence in Putin's increasingly neo-Soviet Russia justifying the sentence in a manner - the use of that emotive, imprecise word 'hate' -that would come easily to a western 'liberal'. To put it bluntly how many of the people who deplore the sentence on Tolokonnikova would advocate the same or even more for, say, a 'skinhead' band who decided to invade a mosque in Bradford.

hegel`s advocate
March 5th, 2014
2:03 PM
What "crimes" is TonyR going on about? Or is he just waffling? Is he objecting to Zizek`s support of Pussy Riot artists or the fact that Nadya and Maria are also on the cover of fashion mag POP with an interview and big free poster inside? WH Smiths if you want one!

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