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2. Postmodernist Empire Meets Holy Rus': How Aleksandr Dugin Tried to Change the Eurasian Periphery into the Sacred Center of the World
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Edith W. Clowes
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction: Is Russia a Center or a Periphery? 1
- 1. Deconstructing Imperial Moscow 19
- 2. Postmodernist Empire Meets Holy Rus': How Aleksandr Dugin Tried to Change the Eurasian Periphery into the Sacred Center of the World 43
- 3. Illusory Empire: Viktor Pelevin’s Parody of Neo-Eurasianism 68
- 4. Russia’s Deconstructionist Westernizer: Mikhail Ryklin’s “Larger Space of Europe” Confronts Holy Rus' 96
- 5. The Periphery and Its Narratives: Liudmila Ulitskaia’s Imagined South 120
- 6. Demonizing the Post-Soviet Other: The Chechens and the Muslim South 140
- Conclusion 165
- Index 173
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface ix
- Abbreviations xvii
- Introduction: Is Russia a Center or a Periphery? 1
- 1. Deconstructing Imperial Moscow 19
- 2. Postmodernist Empire Meets Holy Rus': How Aleksandr Dugin Tried to Change the Eurasian Periphery into the Sacred Center of the World 43
- 3. Illusory Empire: Viktor Pelevin’s Parody of Neo-Eurasianism 68
- 4. Russia’s Deconstructionist Westernizer: Mikhail Ryklin’s “Larger Space of Europe” Confronts Holy Rus' 96
- 5. The Periphery and Its Narratives: Liudmila Ulitskaia’s Imagined South 120
- 6. Demonizing the Post-Soviet Other: The Chechens and the Muslim South 140
- Conclusion 165
- Index 173