Category: 共产主义

  • The U.S.S.R. Is Back

    The U.S.S.R. Is Back (on Clothing Racks)

    07-11-28 星期三
    MOSCOW, Nov. 26 — Empowered by an oil boom that pushed the country’s trade surplus past $94 billion this year, Russia has been flexing its muscles abroad. At home, meanwhile, young and trendy Muscovites are in the throes of nostalgia for the staples of Soviet childhoods, relics of a time when the U.S.S.R. was at the height of superpower status.
    That may explain why one of the most popular fashion designers this fall is Denis Simachev, who is selling overcoats fastened with hammer-and-sickle buttons, gold jewelry minted to look like Soviet kopecks and shirts festooned with the Soviet coat of arms, complete with embroidered ears of wheat.
    “People in their 30s see these kinds of symbols as reminders of happy memories, like going to pioneer camp where they lived together, ate breakfast together and played sports,” said Mr. Simachev, 33, who wears his hair in a Samurai-style ponytail. He insists he is no Communist — for one thing, his overcoats sell for about $2,100 and his T-shirts for about $600. His boutique is sandwiched between Hermès and Burberry stores on a pedestrian lane, Stoleshnikov, that is one of the capital’s most expensive shopping streets.
    Mr. Simachev first attracted notice with a collection of retro Olympic tracksuits emblazoned with C.C.C.P., the Cyrillic initials for the U.S.S.R., and T-shirts printed with the likeness of President Vladimir V. Putin, which served as a wink at the cult of personality forming around the leader.
    By tapping into a generation that is experiencing an identity crisis, Mr. Simachev, who is also known here as a D. J., a Ducati motorcycle rider and a snowboarder, has quickly become the epitome of Russian cool for a subset of gilded Moscow youth. They throng the pub underneath his store for lunch and on weekend evenings when it transforms into a nightclub.
    Victoria Tirovskaya, 24, says she wears the designer’s clothes because they are chic and a bit audacious. “I have a classic blouse and shorts from Simachev but I also have a U.S.S.R. sweatshirt,” Ms. Tirovskaya, an interior designer, said. “Before Simachev, nobody dared to use the symbol of our country as a fashion icon.”
    The designer’s rise as the commissar of Soviet kitsch neatly dovetails with Russia’s current embrace of retrograde politics and resurgent nationalism. A billboard just off Red Square advertises the results of the parliamentary elections, scheduled for early December, as if they were a fait accompli: “Moscow votes for Putin!”
    After more than a decade of Westernization, in which international brands have flooded the Russian market and the Russian elite have taken to wearing designers from Valentino to Louis Vuitton, a “Back to the U.S.S.R.” movement among consumers seems a logical step, some social observers here say.
    “At first, the people of my generation wanted to try those things that our parents could not, but now that we have seen everywhere, we are coming back to our roots,” said Evelina Khromtchenko, the editor in chief of the Russian edition of L’Officiel, a French fashion magazine.
    Mr. Simachev has developed a swaggering fashion lexicon typified in his men’s wear by fur hats, fur boots, jackets with muscular shoulders and slim-hipped, low-slung trousers. “We are from Russia, from the former Soviet Union,” he said. “It’s what I know about, it’s what inspires me, and now, after years of Russians trying to live a Western lifestyle and forget they are Russian, other people are getting it.”
    Unlike the Americana of Ralph Lauren, with his easeful style informed by the Ivy League, Mr. Simachev’s evocation of motherland style often provocatively incorporates jingoistic elements. In the past four years, he has designed collections inspired by the war in Chechnya, the boycotted 1980 Moscow Olympics, the Soviet Navy and, this season, Moscow criminal gangs of the 1990s.
    Critics have interpreted his collections as endorsements of, or protests against, past and current regimes. But Mr. Simachev described himself as apolitical. “I am a mirror for what is going on around me,” he said.
    He added: “Nobody wants to go back to Communism. But it had certain attributes and symbols which for younger people are not associated with the regime, but with our own personal memories.”
    Russians more steeped in Soviet history say they are appalled at the merchandising of the symbols of totalitarianism. “Personally, I would never wear something by Denis Simachev because, for me, those symbols mean Stalinist terror, Communism, a K.G.B. spy system and the cold war,” said Alexandre Vassiliev, a fashion historian who has published 14 books here. “I disapprove completely.”
    The designer’s fans say his motives are purely commercial. “Why did Andy Warhol paint Mao Zedong or Lenin? Because they are easily recognizable symbols,” said Nicolas Iljine, who specializes in Russian-American cultural exchange for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. “This is all pop nostalgia in a light-handed way. It doesn’t have deeper meaning.”
    Mr. Simachev’s fashions are reminiscent of the tongue-in-cheek use of Mao references by the Hong Kong retailer David Tang, who sold his versions of retro Communist kitsch in the late ’90s, just as China was embracing the global capitalist economy.
    For now, the Simachev label appears to be attracting more attention than revenue. With Russians earning an average of about $550 a month, few can afford Mr. Simachev’s wares. The designer’s clothes sell at about 30 multibrand boutiques in Russia and about 15 stores abroad, said Anna Dyulgerova, the development director of the brand.
    The investors behind the label are two Moscow businessmen, Vadim and Vyacheslav Aminov, who declined to reveal annual sales or the size of their share in the company. Vadim Aminov, 38, said the two hope to make Simachev the first Russian brand to win worldwide recognition. Mr. Simachev already shows his men’s wear collections on the runways of Milan. His Web site,www.denissimachev.ru, is in English.
    Vyacheslav Aminov, 48, said the brand was famous enough that it attracted imitators. “When I was on the beach in Sardinia, I saw hawkers selling fake Simachev T-shirts,” he said. “I am sure that Simachev is the only Russian designer who has knockoffs.”
    Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
    Link to the article

  • 劳尔·卡斯特罗

    老卡太老了,劳尔快接位了,作为美洲的社会主义明灯,老卡的贡献是非比寻常的,在美国门口摆上社会主义大旗,而且这么多年,居然没被颠覆,这主要得益于老 卡的政策,对于教育,福利事业的发展,美军就算驻扎在门口也不怕,而就算驻扎在古巴门口的美军,也没办法把老卡干掉,老卡穿的一直都是绿色军衣,时时给人 一种军事政权的形象,不过事实是不是这样就不知道了,老卡快80了,再也经不起摔交和演讲了,共产主义领导人从来都是以个人魅力取胜的,从列宁时代开始就 是这样,相比之下,所谓的西方民主社会,就差 的多了,菁英是不会在和平环境里面产生的,和平环境产生的是按照社会安排,由社会机器生产的一个个无个性特征的成熟产品。

    1987年版的Havana Nights没看过,只看了2004版的,感觉不错,古巴的革命者看起来都那么富有浪漫气息。

    http://go.cqu.edu.cn/ken/gallery.php?page=1&album=HavanaNights

  • 古巴医疗卫生事业有成

    古巴医疗卫生事业有成
    新华网 (2003-08-27 16:12:50) 来源:新华网
    新华网哈瓦那8月26日电(记者赵凯)古巴虽长期受美国的经济封锁,面临很多困难,但政府40多年来一直努力发展公共卫生事业,已建立起一套较为完整的医疗卫生服务体系,医药领域的开发和研究也取得了令人瞩目的成就。
    1959年革命胜利后,古巴政府大力培养医护人员,逐步建立起全国卫生网,并开始实施全民免费医疗制度。过去10多年,古巴经济面临困难,但国家每年都拿出国民生产总值的近9%用于公共卫生事业,一直坚持免费医疗制度,医疗卫生机构的数量持续增加。
    目前,古巴全国共有近6.9万名医生,平均160个居民拥有一名医生。这一比例在世界上名列前茅。古巴从20世纪80年代中开始推广实行“家庭医生”服务。经过多年努力,“家庭医生”目前几乎遍布城市和乡村的每个角落,覆盖面达到98%。
    “家庭医生”是一种专为社区以及工厂、企业、学校等单位提供基本医疗服务的医生,其中社区医生所占比例和所起作用最大。“家庭医生”提供的服务方便、快捷、深受居民欢迎。这种初级医疗服务制度为预防疾病、保障居民健康做出了巨大贡献。
    在不断完善医疗卫生制度的同时,古巴政府还不断加强医药研究。目前,在人体器官移植、神经外科治疗等方面,古巴的医疗技术水平在拉美地区处于领先地位。 其中骨髓、心脏、肝脏、胰腺等器官的移植手术已具有世界级水平。近几年来,古巴在治疗神经系统疾病方面也走在世界前列,在成功治愈帕金森氏症、早老性痴呆 症等神经系统疾病方面取得了巨大成就。
    由于美国的长期封锁,古巴很难从外国采购药品。古巴依靠自己的力量利用先进的基因工程研究开发新药,在干扰素、疫苗等药物的研发方面取得显著成果。
    20世纪80年代,古巴政府把生物工程列为国家重要工业项目,制订并实施“生物技术投资计划”,先后斥资10亿美元,用于发展生物技术与制药产业。位于 哈瓦那西郊的古巴遗传工程和生物技术中心成立于1986年,目前已发展成为一个拥有高水平研究人员和世界先进设备、集科研和生产于一体的科技实体,是目前 古巴医药研究的排头兵。该中心研制的人体白细胞干扰素、乙型肝炎重组疫苗、细胞生长因子、重组链激酶等生物制品已达到世界先进水平。目前,它对艾滋病疫苗 的研究也取得了重大进展。此外,古巴分子免疫试验中心在研究细胞工程、组织细胞培养、蛋白质分析、基因工程等方面取得了显著成就,主要产品有:诊断和治疗 肿瘤的单克隆抗体、抗表皮生长因子受体、艾滋病诊断试剂盒等。
    古巴医疗卫生事业和医药研究不断发展使越来越多的古巴医药产品进入了国际市场。 其产品在南美市场占有举足轻重的地位,在欧洲、亚洲也有一定的市场份额。古巴的降血脂药物在世界许多国家受到欢迎;预防乙型肝炎的疫苗已出口到了拉美、原 苏联地区和印度;通过与国际药业巨头史克必成公司的合作,古巴研制的乙型脑炎疫苗还销售到了美国。
    随着医疗卫生事业的发展,古巴的婴儿死亡率近年来也一直保持在千分之十以下,超过了一些发达国家的水平;人均寿命延长,到2002年已达76.15岁,已跨入世界长寿国家行列。