Russkii as the New Rossiiskii? Nation-Building in Russia After 1991

被引:19
作者
Blakkisrud, Helge [1 ]
机构
[1] Norwegian Inst Int Affairs NUPI, Oslo, Norway
来源
NATIONALITIES PAPERS-THE JOURNAL OF NATIONALISM AND ETHNICITY | 2023年 / 51卷 / 01期
关键词
nation-building; Russia; Yeltsin; Putin; civilization; STATE; IDENTITY; MYTH;
D O I
10.1017/nps.2022.11
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
Russia's post-1991 nation-building project has been torn between competing interpretations of national identity. Whereas the other former Soviet republics opted for nation-building centered on the titular nation, Russia's approach to national identity was framed by the fact that the RSFSR had been defined not as a designated national homeland but as a multi-ethnic federation. This, coupled with Russia's definition as the legal successor of the Soviet Union, suggesting continuity and a history of uninterrupted statehood, has enabled a range of rivaling understandings of how to define the "nation." Focusing on top-down official nation-building, this article examines how, against a backdrop of shifting political contexts, structural constraints, and popular attitudes, the Kremlin has gradually revised its understanding of what constitutes the "Russian nation." Four models for post-Soviet Russian nation-building are identified - the ethnic, the multi-national, the civic, and the imperial. Over time, the correlation of forces among these has shifted. The article concludes that, despite some claims of an ethno-nationalist turn after 2014, the Kremlin still employs nationalism instrumentally: National identity has undoubtedly become more russkii-centered, but, at the same time, the Kremlin keeps the definition of "Russianness" intentionally vague, blurring the boundaries between "nation" and "civilization."
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页码:64 / 79
页数:16
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