The Birth of Pussy Riot: Six Early Songs

The seizure of town squares is Joyful Wisdom / The absence of shithead leaders is everyone's Will to Power

The Joyful Wisdom (1882) and The Will to Power (1901) are both works written by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. They are translated here without the definite article “the” in their English titles to emulate the flow of the original Russian lyrics. There are several translations of The Joyful Wisdom’s title, such as The Gay Science, but I have translated it here as the former due to modern English-language connotations. Both works experiment with the notion of mental freedom in conjunction with the desire for power (Machtgelüst) as they relate to our individual psychologies. Nadya Tolokonnikova herself later wrote in a prison letter to Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek (who was previously mentioned in “Free the Cobblestones”) in 2013 that said “Borrowing Nietzsche's definition, we are the children of Dionysus, sailing in a barrel and not recognizing any authority,” meaning that it’s her belief that we are all inherently free, it is only when we recognize authority figures that we give them power over us. Here Pussy Riot is using Nietzschean philosophy to define what the “protest” that they’re encouraging to take place in Russia is and should be, both in theory and in practice.

This page is referenced by: