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Hardcover The View from the Vysotka: A Portrait of Russia Today Through One of Moscow's Most Famous Addresses Book

ISBN: 031232278X

ISBN13: 9780312322786

The View from the Vysotka: A Portrait of Russia Today Through One of Moscow's Most Famous Addresses

Completed shortly before Joseph Stalin's death in 1953, the vysotkii, or "sky houses," still dominate the Moscow skyline today. Seven in all, they were the Soviet answer to the American skyscraper, transforming the Soviet capital from a feudal backwater into the city of the future. With their soaring towers and gothic architectural details, the vysotkas were intended to be enduring monuments to the workers state and to the glories of Communism-though they were built on the backs of slave laborers and, initially, the prerogative only of the Soviet elite. Now these imposing giants lie on the fault line between a world that has vanished and one still emerging from its ruins. When she moved to Moscow several years ago, journalist and Russia expert Anne Nivat settled into one of the vysotkas, the one that happens to overlook the Kremlin. She became fascinated by the building and learned everything she could about its history. As she got to know her neighbors and fellow tenants, Nivat discovered that they included some of the building's original inhabitants or their descendants, hand-chosen by Stalin and his henchman Lavrenti Beria (arrested and executed for high treason shortly after Stalin's death)-KGB operatives, Bolshoi ballerinas, and artists of Soviet agitprop. Living side by side with them were representatives of the "new Russia"---entrepreneurs, foreign investors, and oligarchs; as any Moscow real estate agent will tell you, Stalin-era buildings in today's market are some of the most coveted addresses in the city. By means of this decaying but still elegant Soviet icon, Nivat gives us a way of grasping the complexities of a country struggling to come to terms with its past and define its future. She allows the tenants of her vysotka to speak for themselves, to offer their perspectives on where Russia has been and where it is going. Some are keenly nostalgic for the days when the State dictated life. Others have prospered in the confusion that has reigned since the Evil Empire's fall and look to a market-driven economy to guide Russia to the Promised Land. Still others fall someplace between the two, anxious but hopeful, longing for yet also fearful of change. Taken together, the portraits of the vysotka's inhabitants provide a panorama of Russia today. The View from the Vysotka shows us life from the inside, evoking both the forces that have swept through this vast and fascinating nation over the course of the last half-century, as well as a n0 building that has managed to endure them.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Stalin's Emerald City

French journalist Anne Nivat lives in Moscow, in a skyscraper called a vysotka (sky house). It overlooks the Kremlin and is one of the most desirable residences in the city. Designed to house 3,500 residents, it also has restaurants and shops on the ground floor. The original residents, handpicked by Stalin and his aides, were artists, high-level bureaucrats, and senior military people. Some of them still live there today, some of the apartments are occupied by their descendents, still others were purchased after the apartments were privatized. Nivat sees the building as a microcosm of the New Russia. This is a hard case to make. Moscow is not typical of Russia, any more than New York is typical of America. And the vysotka is not typical of Moscow any more than Trump Tower is typical of New York. Still, there really is an interesting cross-section of residents there, and Nivat lets them do most of the talking in her book. One resident, whose father sculpted many of the giant Lenin statues that used to decorate Moscow, summarized their attitudes. It all breaks down by age, he said. Those over seventy are nostalgic for the past, those in their fifties are disappointed and are having a hard time adjusting to the New Russia, those under forty have adapted one way or another, and the under-twenty-fives have never known anything else. That certainly holds true for those interviewed here. Older residents reminisce about when they or their parents were the toast of the town. They yearn for the good old days of Stalin. One of the lobby attendants is wistful about the changes since the fall of communism. "If only we had taken the best parts of the West, instead of choosing the worst!" A common thread in these interviews is the affection everyone here has for Moscow. Even the most cynical, even the foreign residents, and especially Anne Nivat herself, love Moscow and Russia. Even as they are telling you what is wrong with the government, with the building, with Russia and Russians, they assure you that they wouldn't live anywhere else. And you believe them.
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