Блог 4
| Hanging out with Alexander Menshikov in the Russian Museum! |
So
this week… This week was pretty standard. Not much went on with class. We have definitely
settled into a routine. It is getting harder for even the professors to stay
awake during our 90 minute classes. My worst day is Tuesday because I am in
class from 10:00 until 5:00 p.m. with only a 30 minute break in the middle.
Very annoying. My phonetics class is the surprising dark horse of my courses,
being my unexpected favorite. The professor is this beautiful woman (which is
why the guys in my class bother to show up) with long dark hair and the classic
Russian bangs. She is tall and skinny and wears all black dresses with tall
black boots and always has a bright red manicure. Very dramatic. If I hadn't
made the decision early to find everything in that class hilarious, it would be
miserable, but she laughs at everything and listening to people repeat tongue
twisters (in Russian, skoragavorky) over
and over again becomes hilarious with enough imagination. Those with the worst
accents/ strongest American accents make class worth it because she'll just
stare at them as if they've grown two heads when they can't roll their Rs or
pronounce a soft L. She seems to find the fact that I think everything is
hilarious equally as entertaining, so I think we have a good thing going.
| A close up of an amazing work, The Last Day of Pompeii, a truly enormous work by Karl Bryullov. |
While
my teachers may like me, I am finding it surprisingly difficult to meet Russian
people my age. We were at SPB on Friday (because where else does one ever
bother to go?) and a Russian, Slava, came up and started talking to us and it
was all going very well until we started talking to his friends. To say they
were racist would be the understatement of the century. There were a few men in
the booth behind theirs who were (this may be indelicate) from Nicaragua and
Brazil and who were black. My friend, the ever amazing Sasha/Alexa went up to
them to chat and the Russians with whom I was speaking were shocked that she would
bother. They proceeded to tell me how far below Russians and white people these
black men were, and said many other things that made me more than
uncomfortable. It is, of course, their country and I am a guest, but we decided
that maybe we'd go talk to Sasha's new friends instead. We made friends with
the Brazilian Navy Seals who speak Portuguese, Spanish and Russian very well
and were very pleasant. Slava stayed with us for a while, and all seemed to go
well. The trouble with this is that all of them started to become a bit
overfriendly. This is the trouble with trying to meet people here. They hear
you are American and come to the instant conclusion that you are looking for
more than friendship. I am still working on finding real Russian friends to
simply hang out with and talk, but so far no luck.
| My new favorite painting, A Parisian Woman, by Alexander Deyneka. |
The
nicest people I have met are always the waitresses that find the fact that our
Russian is just awful hilarious. Saturday was a very interesting and fun day
with very nice waitresses and very confusing adventures involving bowling. The
day started with a tour of the Russian Museum, which is by far my favorite
place on earth, so far. I could live in that museum and be completely happy. The
stories and portraits are truly stunning. I love hearing stories about
Catherine the Great and the work that Russian artists put into their amazing
pieces. Even the modern section was stunning, if confusing at times. I bought a
few posters while I was there, which was very exciting because they are old
Soviet propaganda posters, mostly against Hilter but also a lot about joining
together to defeat, this or that enemy. They're pretty much awesome. The tour
was very good. So good, in fact, that we gained two Chinese tourists for the
entire tour who kept stepping in front of everyone's pictures.
| Can't remember the name/artist but truly stunning. |
After
the museum we went out for lunch. It was my friend Rhiannon's birthday (technically
it was on the 29th of February but that presented some difficulties this year)
so we grabbed lunch (101 rubles for borsch, blini, and tea!) and decided to go
bowling. Bowling here is very confusing. I believe that the Russians imported
bowling alleys but forgot to import actual bowlers to show them what to do.
Watching them bowl was definitely a highlight of my trip. While I am terrible,
I'm pretty sure I don't look absolutely ridiculous while doing it. It was very
difficult to get a lane, shoes, and understand exactly what was going on
because I was the only one willing to talk to anyone in Russian. My head always
gets very tired when I become the group spokesperson. Lots of translating. Finally
we figured out that, no, we were not in fact allowed to open a cake and eat it
there, so after interesting bowling and being lied to about when a lane would
be open for us, we left and went to a restaurant. We weren't allowed to eat
cake their either, but after about 1:00 a.m. they seem to stop caring. It was
very enjoyable, even after having to call two taxis, one of which did NOT look
legitimate in any way. The language barriers make for interesting times, especially
when I'm being counted on to get everyone to the right place after the metro
closes. Today is Sunday and I was going to go to the Kuntz-Kamera museum today
which is both free and full of weird scientific oddities collected by Peter the
Great. According to Wikipedia it was the first museum in Russia and focuses on
anthropology and ethnography. I decided I'd rather shower and do homework, but
I will be going sometime this week so I won't give away any spoilers just yet!
I
think I have decided that these blogs will be coming out on Sundays, since those
are my days with the most down time. I don't want to promise one every Sunday,
because not all weeks give me something to write about. This week was a bit
dry, except the Russian Museum and birthday adventures. Hopefully I'll have
some interesting things to say, but in the mean time I would like to take a
second to thank everyone who has been reading this! I hope you have enjoyed
reading it as much as I enjoy writing it. I love sharing my adventures with all
of the people I love and this will make it easier when I get back! I won't have
to catch anyone up on my last four months! Thanks for reading, guys!
Here's a super groovy song that I sing for
phonetics class all the time. Hope it gets stuck in your head as often as it
does in mine:
Straight across bangs. Google Kseniya Simonova. Technically she is Ukrainian but she looks just like the women here.
ReplyDeleteYou know your teacher is quite brutal. Because, some lyrics of Zemfira's song are insanely complicate. Not only in comprehension, but also in pronunciation.
ReplyDeleteSemester abroad justified. Right there :-)
DeleteDiggin the song and painting you posted.
ReplyDelete