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Moscow 2042

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Moscow 2042
1st English edition (1987)
AuthorVladimir Voinovich
Original titleМосква 2042
LanguageRussian
GenrePolitical, Dystopian, Satirical
PublisherHarcourt Brace Jovanovich (English 1st ed.)
Publication date
1986
Publication placeSoviet Union
Published in English
1987
Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages424
ISBN0-15-162444-5
OCLC14932938
891.73/44 19
LC ClassPG3489.4.I53 M6513 1987
CPGB — The Communist party of state security.
(combined Emblem of the USSRKGB)

Moscow 2042 ([Москва 2042] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) is a 1986 novel (translated into English from Russian 1987) by Vladimir Voinovich.[1] In this book, the alter ego of the author travels to the future, where he sees how communism has been built up in Moscow: at first, it seems the government has actually been successful in doing so. But slowly it becomes clear that it is not really a utopia after all.

Voinovich wrote this book in 1986, a few years before the downfall of the Soviet Union.

Plot summary

The Russian author Kartsev, living in Munich in 1982 (just like Voinovich himself), time travels to the Moscow of 2042. After the "Great August Revolution", the new leader referred to as "Genialissimus" has changed the Soviet Union... up to a certain point. After Vladimir Lenin's dream of the world revolution narrowed down to Joseph Stalin's theory of "Socialism in one country", Genialissimus has decided to start from building "Communism in one city", namely in Moscow.

The ideology has changed somewhat, into a hodgepodge of Marxism-Leninism and Russian Orthodoxy (Genialissimo himself is also Patriarch). The country is ruled by CPGB — The Communist Party of State Security, a merger of Communist Party and KGB. The decay from which the Soviet Union suffered has worsened. The rest of the Soviet Union, where people barely survive, has been separated by a Berlin type of wall from the "paradise" of Moscow, where communism has been realised. Within the wall everyone gets everything by the communist principle, "according to his needs", though their needs are not decided by themselves, but by the Genialissimus. Most people have "ordinary needs", but a chosen few have "extraordinary needs". For the first-mentioned group, life is dismal even within the privileged "Moscow Republic". The situation finally gets so desperate that people throw themselves in the arms of the "liberator", a dissident writer and acquaintance of Kartsev, the Slavophile Sim Karnavalov (an apparent mockery of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn), who enters Moscow on a white horse and proclaims himself Tsar Serafim the First. Thus, communism is abandoned and society progressed back into feudal autocracy.

This novel is considered[2] to be a masterpiece of dystopian satire. Some elements of it, as noted by Voinovich himself,[3] start to sound ominously prophetic in the recent years.

See also

References