Description
Russia's Regional Identities
The Power of the Provinces
Routledge Contemporary Russia and Eastern Europe Series
Coordinators: Clowes Edith, Erbslöh Gisela, Kokobobo Ani
Language: EnglishSubjects for Russia's Regional Identities:
Keywords
Russia's Regional Identities; siberian; Siberian Regional; regionalism; Russian Federation; identity; Volga Urals Region; symbolic; Dense; geography; Young Man; hadji; Tatar Identity; murat; Regional Identity Formation; mark; Symbolic Geography; lipovetsky; Ural Republic; russian; Center Region Relations; Edith W; Clowes; Yasnaya Polyana; Gisela Erbslöh; Siberian Identity; Ani Kokobobo; Orel Region; Susan Smith-Peter; Lenin Monument; Anne Lounsbery; Lenin Square; Victoria Donovan; Fairy Tales; Jane Costlow; Orel; Lyudmila Parts; Russian Regions; Mark Lipovetsky; NATO; Bradley Gorski; Follow; Alla Anisimova; Superimposed; Olga Echevskaya; Census; Wilson T; Bell; anti-Semitic; John Romero; Persona; Yulia Gradskova; Catherine Evtuhov
Publication date: 05-2020
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 01-2018
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Biography
/li>
Introduction, Part I: Framing Russia’s Regions, 1. "The Six Waves of Russian Regionalism in European Context, 1830-2000", 2. "Provinces, Regions, Circles, Grids: How Literature Has Shaped Russian Geographical Identity", Part II: Rethinking European Russian Identities, 3. "Militarized Memory: Patriotic Re-branding in Post-Soviet Pskov", 4. "Wayfinding, Map-making and the Holy Springs of the Orel Region", 5. "‘How is Voronezh not Paris?’ City Branding in the Russian Provinces", Part III: Russian Identities in the Urals 6. "The Strange Case of a Regional Cultural Revolution: Sverdlovsk in the Perestroika Years", 7. "Enchanted Geographies: Aleksei Ivanov and the Aesthetic Management of Ural Regional Identity", Part IV: Russian Identities in Siberia, 8. "Siberian Regional Identity: Self-Perception, Solidarity, or Political Claim?", 9. "Tomsk Regional Identity and the Legacy of the Gulag and Stalinist Repression" Part V: Regional Identities outside the Orthodox Zone, 10. "National Identity in Post-Soviet Tatarstan: Orthodox Missionaries in Twenty-First Century Tatar Literature and Film", 11. "Women, Memory, and Resistance: Dealing with the Soviet Past in the Volga-Ural Region", 12. "‘Why Does Russia Need Hadji Murat’s Head?’ Hadji Murat, Dagestani Identity, and Russia’s Colonial Exploits", Afterword: "The Power of the Provinces".
Edith W Clowes is a Professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, USA.
Gisela Erbslöh is a freelance journalist and literary critic, who has written extensively on Russian, Belorussian, and Northern Caucasian culture, history and social life
Ani Kokobobo is Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Kansas, USA.