The New Russian Nationalism Imperialism, Ethnicity and Authoritarianism

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
russia as an anti- liberal european civilisation

Conclusions

Among the three ‘civilisational grammars’ available for position-
ing Russia in relation to Europe, the Kremlin chose the second one



  • of being a European country that follows a non- Western path
    of development – already in the second half of the 1990s. Since
    then, it has been gradually constructing an ideological posture,
    cemented around the concept of conservatism. This posture has
    been progressively refined into the three ‘declensions’, manifest
    in concrete public policies and new coercive legislation. The con-
    servative posture, and in particular the language of morality, are
    seen as the way to rehabilitate Russia as the other Europe, making
    it possible to reject Western liberalism while claiming to be the
    authentic Europe. Within this ideological posture, plurality is
    maintained, and even the institutionalisation of the three ‘declen-
    sions’ still offers some sort of room for manoeuvre, including
    many internal disagreements. This limited plurality has prevented
    the constitution of a doctrine, properly speaking, on such key
    matters as the relation between Church and state, the definition
    of a core Russian identity, the relation to the imperial past and
    current migration policy.
    How does the analysis presented in this chapter relate to the
    broader debate about Russian nationalism? Scholarly debates
    have tended to overestimate the ideological contents advanced
    by Russian intellectuals and politicians and underestimate the
    personal trajectory or the institutional location of these entre-
    preneurs of nationalism. As a result, nationalism becomes a
    confusing notion employed to define several groups of people
    or agencies, with different tools for disseminating their ideas,
    speaking to different constituencies, and with highly diverging
    agendas (for more on this, see Laruelle 2014a). State representa-
    tives, politicians rallying around the regime or in opposition, the
    clergy, academic or quasi- academic figures, skinhead groups – all
    these may be encompassed as bearers of ‘Russian nationalism’,
    something that does not help in building a relevant interpretative
    framework.
    Taking the state narrative as my focal point, I have sought to
    encapsulate what is often interpreted as nationalism and show

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