
From the review for “Walking on Ice. An American Businessman in Russia” from Russia Profile magazine, by its editor, Andrei Zolotov, Jr.
Of the legion of Western entrepreneurs who came to Russia in the early 1990s in search of opportunities, many came here guided not just by greed, but by a quest for adventure. But there were few who had become infatuated with Russian culture built their businesses as a cultural matchmaking of sorts. They had the inquisitive minds and open hearts of cultural interpreters, which helped push their projects in the land, where, as one such person, Frederick R. Andresen put it, “everything is difficult—and everything is possible.”
Andresen put his insightful observations into a tenderly written, concise book, which is neither an academic study, nor a memoir; neither a business manual, nor a cultural history. Yet it somehow manages to serve all these purposes and can be recommended as an easy and highly educational read for aspiring Russia scholars and people preparing for a tour of duty in Russia.
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Tags: Andrei Zolotov, Anton Chekhov, Brothers Karamazov, Dostoevsky, fred andresen, James Billington, russia, Russia Profile, Russian Orthodox Church, Russian soul, Russian women, The Grand Inquisitor
About Fred, Books by Fred Andresen, Business Practice, Intercultural relations, Literature, Russian Life, The Arts, The writing process, Walking on Ice | fred |
July 26, 2010 7:00 pm |
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“Nothing is impossible in Russia but reform.” Oscar Wilde
I think Oscar Wilde was wrong—but it will take time to know. The efforts to transform Russia into a viable and democratic economy, one that fits comfortably with the rest of the free world, will at best jerk forward over the coming years. But it is happening. Three steps forward and two backward. Still, one residual step in the right direction is something to be grateful for in a land of such immense potential. That is an improvement over Lenin’s assessment of Russian progress, “One step forward and one back.”
History has not been kind to the Russians. Seventy years of cruel rigidity under Communism within the context of a thousand years of autocratic rule has fostered a blind dependence on central authority, as de Tocqueville says “of servitude,” a resulting lack of personal responsibility and self confidence, and a fatalistic distrust of the future.

Historically, and largely because of their geography, Russians missed out entirely on the pivotal events of Western development. A thread running through their complex political history is the fear of and acceptance of an all-powerful and sometimes arbitrary central authority, the influence of constricting medieval orthodoxy, and the mystical unifying force called the “Russian soul.”
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Tags: Brothers Karamazov, Communism, de Tocqueville, Kursk, Lenin, Oscar Wilde, Repin, Russian soul, The Grand Inquisitor
Business Practice, Intercultural relations, Literature, Russian Life, The Arts, Uncategorized, Walking on Ice | fred |
March 9, 2010 9:16 pm |
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