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Student obstruction at Moscow University in the second third of the 19th century as a form of protest activity

Gritsenko Alina Igorevna

Postgraduate student; Faculty of History; Lomonosov Moscow State University

108821, Russia, Moscow, village Filimonkovskoye, Usadebny Park str., 3, sq. 148

a.l.i.n.a.1991@mail.ru

DOI:

10.7256/2454-0609.2024.4.70787

EDN:

LLETFE

Received:

17-05-2024


Published:

23-06-2024


Abstract: The object of the study is the phenomenon of student obstruction at the Moscow University of the XIX century as a form of student protest against lecturers who caused dissatisfaction. The subject of the study is the reasons for student protests against professors, reasons for demarche, as well as the results and consequences of obstruction for the teachers, the most active students as well as the organization of the educational process and ways of student management by the university authorities. In addition, within the framework of this article, based on official sources, memoir literature and archival documents, an attempt is made to reconstruct the mechanics of student protest itself using the example of two of the most high-profile and significant cases in the history of Moscow University of the specified period, namely the "stories" with professors Malov and Varnek. The research methodology is classical for works on social history: It is based on the fundamental principle of historicism and a number of traditional methods for historical science (historical-genetic, historical-typological, comparative). The novelty of the research lies in the fact that in the Russian literature there have been practically no attempts to study the phenomenon of student obstruction at the pre-reform Moscow University. A special contribution of the author of the work is the study of the topic of student protests in the context of the formation of a student corporation with its inherent ethics, an unspoken set of rules, special ways of defending their rights in conflicts with teachers and university authorities. The author of the study also concludes that the university leadership in this era was generally quite lenient towards cases of obstruction and protests against teachers, although after the "Varnek's story" the university authorities treated the instigators and participants of the protest more strictly than the initiators of the obstruction against Professor Malov in the 1830s.


Keywords:

Student obstruction, Imperial Moscow University, Malov's story, Varnek's story, students of the Moscow University, Alexander Herzen, Vissarion Belinsky, The Nicholas Era, the history of higher education, Professorship at Moscow University

This article is automatically translated. You can find original text of the article here.

The problem of the formation and functioning of the student corporation in the universities of the Russian Empire is an important scientific topic within the framework of the modern historiographical tradition. This process was seriously influenced not only by the student customs and traditions that were formed in the middle of the XIX century, but also by the student circles and societies that appeared. The conflicting episodes of university history are also sufficiently indicative of the practices of interaction between university residents and their willingness to show corporate solidarity.

In the typology of conflicts that took place in the university environment of the specified time, conflicts between university pets and teachers occupy a special place. The most striking manifestation of student protest against objectionable professors should be considered various types of obstruction, which periodically occurred in the classrooms of Moscow University, the largest university in Russia, which had a long tradition of student freethinking.

The purpose of this article is to identify the most characteristic features of student obstruction at Moscow University in the middle of the XIX century – their causes, reasons for protest, results and consequences for students. The study of this phenomenon seems all the more justified because in modern Russian historiography there are practically no works devoted to the study of this problem. Thus, the article by the Kharkov historian I. S. Posokhov is partly comparative in nature and puts obstruction in the broader context of students' protest against university authorities and living conditions at universities [1]. A number of works by Russian authors relate to politicized forms of protest of a much later era [2, 3], and Soviet authors sought to reduce any form of student opposition to teachers to the early stages of the formation of a revolutionary movement in a diverse environment [4].

The very concept of "obstruction" (from Latin. obstructio – "obstacle") dates back to British parliamentary practice and meant in the XVIII-XIX centuries opposition to normal legislative work on the part of opposition deputies in the form of delays, "slamming" speakers, etc. However, this concept also has a broader interpretation – "actions demonstratively aimed at disrupting something [5]", and in this regard it is quite possible to talk about methods of student obstruction in relation to objectionable teachers.

Within the walls of Moscow University, students allowed themselves to show dissatisfaction with the lectures of a number of teachers at the dawn of the XIX century. As Posokhov rightly noted, the first cases of obstructionist actions by Moscow students were noted in the memoir literature in relation to the 1810s [1, p. 103]. In the middle of this century, as Sverbeev recalled, a "funny story" happened at the beginning of a lecture by an unpopular professor of universal history, N. E. Cherepanov: students continued to shuffle their feet and thereby create creaking and noise much longer than it was required to greet the lecturer. The professor understood what this behavior meant by remarking to the students that their "such courtesy <...> worse than any ignorance", after which he continued to lecture in his usual dispassionate tone [6, p. 11], eliminating the conflict.

However, in the previous case, as the author of the memoirs himself admitted, this situation at Professor Cherepanov's lecture occurred unintentionally [6, p. 11], and this episode, therefore, cannot be about conscious collective protest.

Since the 1830s, Moscow professors have periodically begun to face various forms of student opposition. As a rule, students were not satisfied with either the manner of presentation of the material or the very content of the lecture course. Some students, especially those who were critical of the order prevailing at the University, allowed themselves to be impertinent in response to the remarks of teachers, as V. G. Belinsky did [7, p. 42], and A. I. Herzen, who somewhat overestimated the opposition and organization of the students, argued that at that time students "openly said in the audience everything that came in the head [8, p. 53]", even if it went against the teacher's position or violated discipline and the calm course of classes.

It was in this atmosphere that the so-called "Malovskaya story" of 1831 broke out, the first successful student obstruction in the history of Moscow University, when an objectionable professor was not only kicked out of the classroom, but actually forced to resign soon. Among the reasons for the student protest in the memoir literature is the rudeness of the professor of the political department M. Ya. Malov in his treatment of students [9, p. 316]. One of the main participants in this story, A.I. Herzen, added that Malov was "a stupid and uneducated professor [8, p. 53]", and the students despised him [10, p. 241-242].

The students were especially outraged that Malov called one of them a "pig [9, p. 321]" – at that time it was a significant humiliation, because of which scuffles and fights took place between the students themselves [11, l. 1]. Students also did not approve of other attempts to compare them with animals, be it a donkey or a horse, and even the teacher's reproach to "boys" students was perceived as a challenge [10, pp. 336-337].

Eventually, the students of the political department decided to protest, and on March 16, 1831, the same Herzen brought the "auxiliary army" – a number of students of the physics and mathematics department ‑ to the political auditorium. The atmosphere in the audience was heated to the limit, and only one bold remark by Malov to the students was enough to make obstruction inevitable. Among the means of expelling the professor, "whistling, hissing, shouting [8, p. 54]", stomping and throwing various objects at the professor are mentioned in the memoirs [10, p. 339]. In the official reports of the university authorities, mocking applause and shuffling of feet were added to this list, accompanying the beginning of the lecture [9, p. 322].

As a result of such a powerful and organized protest by the entire student audience, Malov was forced to leave, but the students chased him in the university courtyard and even on the street, throwing his galoshes after him [8, p. 54]. Ya.I. Kostenetsky adds that a crowd of students chased the unwanted teacher far down Tverskaya Street, "atuka" as when hunting a hare [10, p. 340].

Later, Herzen, who recalled the "Malovskaya story", noticed that the students, in the heat of the struggle with the hated professor, forgot that outside the university walls the whole incident took on a completely different appearance and was subject to investigation by police officials. Malov himself also added fuel to the fire by going to complain about students not to the university authorities, but to the Third Department. Moreover, he hastened to inform the gendarmes that the students staged a political protest against his lecture on the "good of monarchism", which was an obvious lie and was quickly refuted [9, p. 318]. Malov later told the university authorities that he had no idea about the reasons for the demonstration, and he had done absolutely nothing wrong to the students.

Despite the intervention of police officials, the case ended unexpectedly mildly for the students: according to the results of an internal university investigation, several students (including M. Rosenheim, Prince A. Obolensky, and also Herzen), declared the instigators, were put in a punishment cell for four days "on bread and water", and the last punishment was completely ignored [8, pp. 56-57]. Kostenetsky added that immediately after the obstruction arranged by Malov, students began to actively gather to discuss what had happened, as well as their position at the University and other issues in general [10, pp. 340-341], and this became the prototype of gatherings and societies of the post-reform period.

Malov's superiors made the idea that after what happened, he could no longer remain a University professor. The only thing that the latter managed to achieve was a postponement of his dismissal for several months, until August 1831, as well as the appointment of a pension for him. With Malov's departure from Moscow University, the "Malovskaya story" ended successfully – largely due to the position of the rector of Dvigubsky and the university authorities, who recognized Malov's rudeness and incompetence, and at the same time the de facto right of students to protest against unfit teachers.

Despite such a successful outcome, the next two decades of the existence of Moscow University, following the adoption of the University Charter in 1835, passed without such excesses, although the student body gradually grew in numbers throughout the 1830s and 1840s, and the nobility in the ranks of the students gradually gave way to the commoners [for more details, see: 12].

In fact, the next significant case of student obstruction against a teacher was the "Varnek story" that happened at Moscow University in 1858, shortly before the beginning of the "Great Reforms". Unlike Malov, who was not respected by colleagues since the time of defending his own master's thesis on the apology of absolute monarchy (Sverbeev told about the dispute related to the defense of Malov's master's thesis in 1815 in his memoirs, however, mistakenly attributing the authorship of the work to Beketov [6, pp. 17-18]), a young professor of zoology N. A. Varnek was a bright scientist, and a number of his works were significantly ahead of their time [13, p. 113]. However, it was this outstanding professor who became the second teacher in the history of Moscow University to face a protest in the audience.

The resentment of the medical students at Varnek had several reasons. Firstly, as P. V. Lebedinsky pointed out in his memoirs, Varnek was really harsh and rude to students, as well as overly demanding in exams – it came to direct bullying of students who had failed [14, p. 312]. Secondly, the teacher's great self-esteem, his professional pride and the belief that students are obliged to perceive complex educational material in the form in which it is offered at lectures also played a role.

Finally, the fatal role was played by the confusion with the lecture courses that were given, which occurred due to a multiple increase in the number of medical students after the government lifted restrictions on admission to universities [15, pp. 12-13]. As a result, the first year of the medical faculty of Moscow University, numbering more than 250 people, was divided into two departments, and they needed to give separate lectures. In this situation, Varnek decided to read zoology first for one half of the course, and comparative anatomy for the other, while he sharply rejected students' complaints about the inconvenience of perceiving the material and the ambiguity of the presentation [14, p. 312].

Eventually, having exhausted legal ways to deal with the professor (the appeal of doctors to the dean had no result), the student meeting decided to arrange an obstruction. It was decided to "boo" the professor and force him to resign from the university department. Again, as in 1831, it was decided to give the obstruction a university–wide character - not only doctors, but also law students and even philologists decided to fight the professor of zoology. With the full connivance of the university authorities and sub-inspectors in relation to student "gatherings", the meeting set a day for an organized protest against Varnek [14, p. 313].

On the day appointed for the demonstration, the audience did not even allow the professor to begin the lecture, deafening him with universal whistling at the very beginning of the lesson. Without stopping whistling, the students left the auditorium in full force, and the confused Varnek felt sick and even fainted in the next room. In the current situation, the university authorities went to the trick of calling the first-year students of the medical faculty one by one to the inspector and forcing them to sign up to attend Varnek's lectures, the reading of which was to resume soon. However, on the appointed day, a full audience of medical students and students of other faculties who supported them declared through the mouth of their deputy, student Zhokhov, that the professor "has no ego", provokes a scandal, and they no longer intend to listen to him. Neither the dean of the faculty Polunin, nor the rector Alfonsky, nor even the trustee Bakhmetev could shake this decision of the students [14, pp. 314-315].

As a result of all these events, the department of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy was soon given to another teacher, and Varnek left Moscow University in 1860 under the plausible pretext of deteriorating eyesight (he lost an eye five years before the events described above). In subsequent years, Varnek worked for the Ministry of Public Education and fruitfully engaged in scientific research until the end of the 1880s [13, p. 114].

However, the victory over Professor Varnek cost the students more than the "lightest" punishment of prominent participants in the Malov story. Some time after the obstruction, the university authorities conducted a survey among students about their role in the "Varnek story" and despite the fact that students tried to respond uniformly and deny the political background in the protest, student deputies were found guilty and expelled from the University ("unconditionally" excluded Zhokhov, deputies Bystrov, Dobrovolsky and Stolpiansky), a number of other people for harsh responses to the survey. In addition, a number of students refused to subscribe and were expelled from the University, who were punished "conditionally", but refused to subscribe in their loyalty [14, p. 317]. In total, a dozen and a half people were forced to leave the University.

Another consequence of the students' victory over Varnek was the tightening of internal rules at Moscow University, which radical students protested against, and Herzen even called them shameful and "military police" on the pages of the Bell [Cit. according to: 15, p. 465], although in reality it was only about establishing monthly control of the Ministry over the educational and scientific activities of medical students [17, p. 30-31]. In general, however, in the conditionally liberal era of university history, which began on the eve of the abolition of serfdom, the University leadership dealt with the instigators of the protest much more strictly than the authorities of the Nikolaev era – with the participants of the "Malovskaya history".

Infrequent but vivid cases of student obstruction directed against objectionable teachers, who caused the displeasure of the student body, represent a visible manifestation of the corporate identity of university students with its inherent heightened sense of self-esteem, a critical view of the state of affairs at the University, sometimes even an excessively strict attitude to the content of lectures and the manner of teaching professors. In the second half of the 19th century, the students of Moscow University, as well as other higher educational institutions of the Russian Empire, will continue their struggle with conservative professors and university authorities, including on political issues.

References
1. Posohov, I. S. (2008). Student obstructions at universities of the Russian Empire. Current problems of national and world history, 11, 101-107.
2. Ishhenko, O. V. (2021). Obstructions as a form of student protest actions in educational institutions of Siberia at the end of the 19th – beginning of the 20th centuries. Manuscript, 12, 2482-2489.
3. Ivanov, A. E. (2004). Student Corporation of Russia at the end of the 19th – beginning of the 20th centuries: Experience of cultural and political self-organization. Moscow: Novyj hronograf.
4. Nasonkina, L. I. (1972). Moscow University after the Decembrist uprising. Moscow: MSU Publ.
5. Obstruction. In: Simakov, V. S., & Krjukovskih, A. P. (Ed.) (1998). Dictionary of historical terms. Saint-Petersburg: Lita.
6. Sverbeev, D. N. (1956). From the memories. In: Moscow University in the memoirs of contemporaries (pp. 7-19). Moscow: MSU Publ.
7. Prozorov, P. (1956). Belinsky and Moscow University in his time (from student memories). In: MMoscow University in the memoirs of contemporaries. (pp. 39-49). Moscow: MSU Publ.
8. Gercen, A. I. (1956). At Moscow University. In: Moscow University in the memoirs of contemporaries. (pp. 50-72). Moscow: MSU Publ.
9. From the chronicle of Moscow University. The story of Professor Malov (1901). Russian archive, 1, 316-324.
10. Kosteneckij, Ja. I. (1887). Memories from my student life. Russian archive, 1, 99-117; 229-242; 321-350.
11. About student Khitrovo’s insult to student Ippolitov and the inspector’s proposal to expel him from the university for this. Moscow State Archive (CGA). F. 418. Op. 251. D. 8. L. 1-2.
12. Petrov, F. A. (2003). The university education system’s formation in Russia. Vol. 4, p. 2. Students. Moscow: MSU Publ.
13. Andreev, A. Ju., & Cygankov, D. A. (Eds). (2010). Imperial Moscow University 1755-1917: An encyclopedic dictionary. Moscow: ROSSPEN.
14. Lebedinskij, P. V. (1915). From the life of Moscow University. The Story of Varnek. Voice of the Past, 9, 310-318.
15. On the admission of an unlimited number of students to all university faculties. (1856). Journal of the Ministry of Public Education (ZhMNP), 89, 12-13.
16Moscow University in the memoirs of contemporaries (1956). Moscow: MSU Publ.
17. On observation of the classes of doctors admitted to attendance at university lectures at the Faculty of Medicine. (1858). ZhMNP, 101, 30-31.

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Review of the article Student obstruction at Moscow University in the second third of the XIX century as a form of protest activity The subject of the study is student obstruction at Moscow University in the second third of the XIX century as a form of protest activity Research methodology. The author does not disclose the methodology of the research in the text of the article, but from the content it can be understood that the article is based on the principles of scientific objectivity, consistency and historicism. The paper uses problem-chronological, historical-comparative and other methods. The author justifies the relevance of the topic well and writes that "the problem of the formation and functioning of the student corporation in the universities of the Russian Empire is an important scientific topic within the framework of the modern historiographical tradition." and notes that the student customs and traditions formed in the middle of the XIX century had a serious impact on the formation of the student corporation, but also appeared during that period student clubs and societies. During the same period, "conflict episodes of university life" between students and teachers and "practices of interaction between university residents, their willingness to show corporate solidarity" were noted. The author notes that student protests (obstruction) were the most pronounced among the conflictsagainst objectionable professors at Moscow University, "which had a long tradition of student freethinking." The scientific novelty is determined by the formulation of the problem. The novelty is also due to the fact that this article is actually the first work that comprehensively and deeply examines the causes of student obstruction at Moscow University. Style, structure, content. The style of the article is generally scientific, but understandable not only for specialists, but also for a wide range of specialists. The structure of the work is aimed at achieving this goal: identifying the most characteristic features of student obstruction at Moscow University in the middle of the XIX century – their causes, reasons for protest, results and consequences for students.. At the beginning of the article, the author reveals the relevance of the topic and its purpose. Further, the author of the reviewed article notes that so far this topic has not been investigated and this article will actually be the first work devoted to the issue of student obstruction. Next, he gives a brief overview of the works in which the protests of students against teachers were considered to one extent or another, and notes that during the Soviet period they tried to present them as stages of the formation of a "revolutionary movement in a diverse environment." The author also provides an explanation of the term obstruction and notes which interpretation of this concept is used in this article. The text of the article is logically structured and presented. The article contains interesting materials that show in which cases and against which teachers students carried out obstruction and in what forms it manifested itself. The actions of students in relation to the professor of the political department M. Ya. Malov in 1931 are presented in some detail. The following case of obstruction was noted in relation to the young professor of zoology N. A. Varnek in 1858. The author analyzes these two cases in detail: shows what was the reason for the obstruction initiated by the students, describes how the obstruction took place and what consequences it had for the professor and for the students themselves. At the end of the article, the author writes that "infrequent but vivid cases of student obstruction directed against objectionable teachers, who caused the displeasure of the student body, represent a visible manifestation of the corporate identity of university students with its inherent heightened sense of self-esteem, a critical view of the state of affairs at the University, sometimes even an excessively strict attitude to the content of lectures and the way professors teach." He further concludes that "In the second half of the 19th century, the students of Moscow University, as well as other higher educational institutions of the Russian Empire, will continue their struggle with conservative professors and university authorities, including on political issues. The bibliography of the work consists of 17 different sources on the research topic. The number and nature of the sources used in writing the article allowed the author to reveal the topic under study comprehensively and deeply. The appeal to the opponents is presented at the level of information collected during the work on the topic of the article, the analysis and bibliography of the work, Conclusions, and the interest of the readership. The article is written on an interesting topic, the conclusions are objective.