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Introduction: Exploring Russian nationalisms
-
Pål Kolstø
and Helge Blakkisrud
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Tables viii
- Notes on Contributors ix
- Preface xvii
- Introduction: Exploring Russian nationalisms 1
-
Part I. Official nationalism
- 1. Contemporary Russian nationalism in the historical struggle between ‘offi cial nationality’ and ‘popular sovereignty’ 21
- 2. Imperial and ethnic nationalism: A dilemma of the Russian elite 50
- 3. Kremlin’s post-2012 national policies: Encountering the merits and perils of identity-based social contract 68
- 4. Sovereignty and Russian national identity-making: The biopolitical dimension 93
-
Part II. Radical and other societal nationalisms
- 5. Revolutionary nationalism in Contemporary Russia 117
- 6. The Russian nationalist movement at low ebb 142
- 7. Ideologue of neo-Nazi terror: Aleksandr Sevastianov and Russia’s ‘partisan’ insurgency 163
- 8. The extreme right fringe of Russian nationalism and the Ukraine conflict: The National Socialist Initiative 187
-
Part III. Identities and otherings
- 9. ‘Restore Moscow to the Muscovites’: Othering ‘the migrants’ in the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections 213
- 10. Anti-migrant, but not nationalist: Pursuing statist legitimacy through immigration discourse and policy 236
- 11. Everyday patriotism and ethnicity in today’s Russia 258
- 12. Identity in Crimea before annexation: A bottom-up perspective 282
- Index 306
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Tables viii
- Notes on Contributors ix
- Preface xvii
- Introduction: Exploring Russian nationalisms 1
-
Part I. Official nationalism
- 1. Contemporary Russian nationalism in the historical struggle between ‘offi cial nationality’ and ‘popular sovereignty’ 21
- 2. Imperial and ethnic nationalism: A dilemma of the Russian elite 50
- 3. Kremlin’s post-2012 national policies: Encountering the merits and perils of identity-based social contract 68
- 4. Sovereignty and Russian national identity-making: The biopolitical dimension 93
-
Part II. Radical and other societal nationalisms
- 5. Revolutionary nationalism in Contemporary Russia 117
- 6. The Russian nationalist movement at low ebb 142
- 7. Ideologue of neo-Nazi terror: Aleksandr Sevastianov and Russia’s ‘partisan’ insurgency 163
- 8. The extreme right fringe of Russian nationalism and the Ukraine conflict: The National Socialist Initiative 187
-
Part III. Identities and otherings
- 9. ‘Restore Moscow to the Muscovites’: Othering ‘the migrants’ in the 2013 Moscow mayoral elections 213
- 10. Anti-migrant, but not nationalist: Pursuing statist legitimacy through immigration discourse and policy 236
- 11. Everyday patriotism and ethnicity in today’s Russia 258
- 12. Identity in Crimea before annexation: A bottom-up perspective 282
- Index 306