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World Affairs Online
Since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, questions of identity have dominated the culture not only of Russia, but of all the countries of the former Soviet bloc. This timely collection examines the ways in which cultural activities such as fiction, TV, cinema, architecture and exhibitions have addressed these questions and also describes other cultural flashpoints, from attitudes to language to the use of passports. It discusses definitions of political and cultural nationalism, as well as the myths, institutions and practices that moulded and expressed national identity. From post-Soviet recollections of food shortages to the attempts by officials to control popular religion, it analyses a variety of unexpected and compelling topics to offer fresh insights about this key area of world culture. Illustrated with numerous photographs, it presents the results of recent research in an accessible and lively way.
In: Russia in Global Affairs, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 164-182
ISSN: 2618-9844
"Russia's current foreign policy is both post-imperial and post-Soviet. The prefix 'post' does not mean impotence or uncertainty. It means that the present is predetermined by the past, it is the inheritor of the past. The inheritor is dissimilar from what it inherits and as long as the inheritor remains dissimilar and not fully aware of its own identity, it continues to be 'post'."
In: Annual review of political science, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 117-148
ISSN: 1545-1577
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the area specialty of Soviet Politics has been transformed. Research on six themes is reviewed: state and revolution, democratization, federalism, economic growth, international relations, and institutional legacies reflecting the communist past. The review finds that post-Soviet research speaks directly to current trends in political science, and the findings of this research should impel generalists to re-specify their theories. A recommendation is offered that the study of post-Soviet politics should push political science away from a notion of institutionalization and in the direction of identifying institutional equilibria.
In: Annual review of political science, Band 3, S. 117-148
ISSN: 1094-2939
Cover -- Half-title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- Notes on contributors -- Map -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. Victims and agents: gender in post-Soviet states -- Gender and transition to what? -- Victims or agents of power? -- Generalisation and difference -- Chapter breakdown and organisation -- Conclusion -- PART I: WOMEN IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION -- Economy -- 2. Do Russian women want to work? -- Does unemployment have a 'female face'? -- Women and work -- Will women be forced out of work in the future? -- Conclusion -- 3. Rural women and the impact of economic change -- Market reforms and agricultural reorganisation -- The new peasant farmers: 'masters' of the land? -- Women on the former state and collective farms -- Unemployment and poverty: a female problem -- The private plots: is the future female? -- 4. Women and the culture of entrepreneurship -- Introduction -- The picture from above: imposing a tradition of market and capitalism in Russia -- The picture from below: women invent a tradition of proto entrepreneurialism -- Za dushoi (for the soul): or the de-contamination of capitalism -- Dividing lines: survival or livelihood? -- Conclusion -- Society -- 5. Images of an ideal woman: perceptions of Russian womanhood through the media, education and women's own eyes -- Public images for political ideals -- The essential woman -- Beauty not brains -- Girls should be girls -- 'The better half of humanity' -- 'Guardians of the family hearth' -- Finding one's 'other half -- Motherhood: every woman's highest calling? -- To work or not to work? -- Mass-produced matryoshki or individual women? -- 6. 'She was asking for it': rape and domestic violence against women -- The historical background: rape, male violence and gender differentiation in Soviet and post-Soviet Russia -- Russian writings on rape
In: Ethnicity, Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union: The Mind Aflame, S. 229-245
In: Russia Under Yeltsin and Putin, S. 159-187
In: South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences, Band 4, Heft 3, S. 412-425
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