Russia's postcolonial identity a subaltern empire in a Eurocentric world

"This book applies postcolonial theory to Russia by looking at it as a subaltern empire. It pushes postcolonial studies and constructivist international relations towards an uneasy dialogue, which produces tensions and reveals multiple blind spots in both approaches. A critical re-evaluation of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Morozov, Viatcheslav, autor (autor)
Formato: Libro
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan 2015.
Colección:Central and Eastern European perspectives on international relations
Materias:
Ver en Universidad de Deusto:https://oceano.biblioteca.deusto.es/primo-explore/search?query=any,contains,991006562382603351&tab=default_tab&search_scope=deusto_alma&vid=deusto
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Descripción
Sumario:"This book applies postcolonial theory to Russia by looking at it as a subaltern empire. It pushes postcolonial studies and constructivist international relations towards an uneasy dialogue, which produces tensions and reveals multiple blind spots in both approaches. A critical re-evaluation of the existing literature enables the author to produce a comprehensive account of how Russia's position in the international system has conditioned its domestic development, and how this in turn generated specific foreign policy outcomes. Having internalised the Eurocentric worldview, Russia is nevertheless different from the core European countries. This difference is not determined by 'culture', but rather by uneven and combined development of global capitalism, in which Russia is integrated as a semi-peripheral nation. The Russian state has colonised its own periphery on behalf of the Western core, but has never been able to overcome economic and normative dependency on the West. The peculiar dialectic of the subaltern and the imperial during the post-Soviet period has given rise to a regime which claims to defend 'genuine Russian values', while in fact there is nothing behind this new traditionalism but the negation of Western hegemony. Trying to 'defend' the nation from the postulated threat of Western interventionism, the regime engages in a disavowal of politics and thus suppresses popular subjectivity. The only political subject that remains on the horizon of Russian politics is the West, while the Russian people, as any other subaltern, are being spoken for, and thus silenced, by the country's Eurocentric elites and the Western intellectuals"--Sitio web del editor.
Descripción Física:VIII, 209 páginas ; 23 cm
Bibliografía:Bibliografía: páginas 173-198. Índice.
ISBN:9781349488599
9781137409294