Imperial and national identities in pre-revolutionary, Soviet, and post-Soviet Russia

Bibliographic Information

Imperial and national identities in pre-revolutionary, Soviet, and post-Soviet Russia

Chris J. Chulos and Johannes Remy (eds.)

(Studia historica, 66)

SKS・FLS, 2002

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Note

By-product of a conference entitled "Imperial self in modern Russia" held at the University of Helsinki in September 1999

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

As Russia's rulers have searched for meaningful ways to unify their diverse and widely scatteres population, they have resorted to the twin ideas of empire and nation. In medieval times, the Orthodox population of Rus' rallied around warrior saints who led the strategic and spiritual fight against infidels and heretics. Peter the Great turned Russia away from the middle ages when he created the image of a modern secular state to which all subjects of the realm were to be subordinated, regarless of ethnisity or creed. The last tsars attempted to restore Orthodoxy and ethnicity to their imperial model which the early Soviets replaced with the ideals of multiculturalism and multinationalism. The articles in this book consider how the ideas of empire and nation have led to national identities that both encouraged interaction with the rest of Europe and have erected obstacles to freedom and full membership in the Western European tradition.

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