In a 1968 issue of Technology and Youth â the relentlessly upbeat Soviet journal that popularised the wonders of modern science â we find an article that titillates the readerâs interest in telepathy, even as it purports to convey the (inconclusive) results of serious scientific experiments conducted by a team of researchers at what was then Leningrad State University (Saint Petersburg State University in the post-Soviet era).
The article begins with the known: an electrocardiogram records the electrical activity of the heart over a period of time, just as electrodes placed on a personâs scalp can record the electrical activity of the brain. But what if we refine our instruments until they can reliably pick up the electrical signature of a personâs âauraâ â the energetic field that hovers around each individual body? Pavel Gulyaev, the lead researcher, soberly explains that the proposed âelectroauragramâ will allow us to eventually record the micro-shimmers we generate with every twitch of a nerve â in fact, even just thinking about something produces a biological charge in our personal electrical field. In the Soviet Union, just as in the West, talking about aura colours and energies was a fad; meanwhile, as Wladimir Velminski recounts here, Soviet scientists were taking the possibility of âbrain waves, mind control, and telepathic destinyâ very seriously.
A long footnote in the bookâs first chapter tells us that all of Gulyaevâs papers were entrusted to the author, and that he intends to use this âwealth of materialâ to more fully investigate Gulyaevâs legacy. We can hope that this project materialises, because Gulyaevâs quest to uncover the material, energetic basis of thought communication is both fascinating and â in one possible interpretation â typical of a kind of Soviet science fictional romanticism.
âWhat ifâ, Gulyaev wonders, âour electromagnetic fields expand through space with the speed of lightâŠ[so that] all people on earth are connected to each other by the electric [beating] fields of their heartsâ? Velminski, however, does not find any geeky curiosity or genuine cultural impulse behind the blurring of boundaries between Soviet scientific and spiritual imaginations. The thesis of this very slim, episodic history of Soviet experiments in telepathy, he argues, is that they âwere meant to reach the brain of a whole society, propagate there, and establish uniformity of thoughtâ. As far back as arguments made by Leon Trotsky, he adds, âthe operations of the âsoulâ were [to be] determined and directed by electromagnetic stimuliâ. The nefarious agenda of psychobiological research lasted until the collapse of the USSR, when the popular televised seances led by hypnotist and clinical psychotherapist Anatoly Kashpirovsky represented, says Velminski, âthe last effort of Soviet power to initiate citizens into the mysteries of the communist apparatusâ.
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The problem with this thesis is that it makes the bookâs examples of Soviet research on the edge of the paranormal far less interesting. Each short chapter bursts with tantalising anecdotes about the quest for direct extrasensory communication, but none of it matters, in this authorâs telling, except to show us that the Soviet Union was hell-bent on finding more effective ways to thoroughly brainwash its own citizens. Fortunately, this overly politicised view has been countered elsewhere by historians of Soviet science; unfortunately, it takes more than a bit of telepathic empathy on the part of the reader to get through the awkward translation (from German) to find the hidden gems in Velminskiâs âwealth of materialâ.
Yvonne Howell, professor of Russian and international studies, University of Richmond.
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Homo Sovieticus: Brain Waves, Mind Control, and Telepathic Destiny
By Wladimir Velminski, translated by Erik Butler
MIT Press, 128pp, ÂŁ14.95
ISBN 9780262035699 and 2338011 (e-book)
Published 3 March 2017
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Just you, me and all your thoughts
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