dc.contributor.author | Korablyova, Valeria | de |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-04-22T09:46:32Z | |
dc.date.available | 2025-04-22T09:46:32Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2024 | de |
dc.identifier.issn | 1863-0421 | de |
dc.identifier.uri | https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/101713 | |
dc.description.abstract | The article discusses a hybrid positionality of Russia on the scale of imperial/colonial difference where Eastern European subjects compensate for the resentment that arises from their peripheral standing by subjugating weaker neighbors striving to acquire recognition from the hegemon and improve their status in the existing cultural hierarchies. Having interiorized the logic of catching-up development, imposed on Europe’s East, Russia has transitioned from a peripheral empire (catching-up imperialism mimicking the hegemon) to a global disruptor (questioning the supremacy of the hegemon and modifying the matrix of differentiation). Seeking to improve Russia’s geopolitical standing and secure its power grip at home, the Kremlin leadership simultaneously evokes imperial and subaltern sentiments through the tropes of humiliation and unrecognized greatness, which are linked in Russian messianism. By framing the stakes of the war as normative and global, it garners support in the so-called Global South around shared grievances and the figure of a common enemy. This normative geopolitical bid manifests a hegemonic struggle played out in an identitarian way. | de |
dc.language | en | de |
dc.subject.ddc | Internationale Beziehungen | de |
dc.subject.ddc | International relations | en |
dc.subject.other | Russia's war with Ukraine; Russian messianism | de |
dc.title | Imperial Sentiment, Subaltern Rhetoric: Russia on the Scale of Imperial/Colonial Difference | de |
dc.description.review | begutachtet (peer reviewed) | de |
dc.description.review | peer reviewed | en |
dc.source.journal | Russian Analytical Digest | |
dc.publisher.country | DEU | de |
dc.source.issue | 319 | de |
dc.subject.classoz | internationale Beziehungen, Entwicklungspolitik | de |
dc.subject.classoz | International Relations, International Politics, Foreign Affairs, Development Policy | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Russland | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Russia | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Hegemonie | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | hegemony | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Geopolitik | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | geopolitics | en |
dc.identifier.urn | urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-101713-8 | |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht kommerz., Keine Bearbeitung 4.0 | de |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 | en |
ssoar.contributor.institution | Forschungsstelle Osteuropa an der Universität Bremen | de |
internal.status | formal und inhaltlich fertig erschlossen | de |
internal.identifier.thesoz | 10057012 | |
internal.identifier.thesoz | 10046447 | |
internal.identifier.thesoz | 10037378 | |
dc.type.stock | article | de |
dc.type.document | Zeitschriftenartikel | de |
dc.type.document | journal article | en |
dc.source.pageinfo | 10-14 | de |
internal.identifier.classoz | 10505 | |
internal.identifier.journal | 1742 | |
internal.identifier.document | 32 | |
internal.identifier.ddc | 327 | |
dc.source.issuetopic | Russian Imperialism and Decolonisation | de |
dc.identifier.doi | https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000701772 | de |
dc.description.pubstatus | Veröffentlichungsversion | de |
dc.description.pubstatus | Published Version | en |
internal.identifier.licence | 20 | |
internal.identifier.pubstatus | 1 | |
internal.identifier.review | 1 | |
dc.subject.classhort | 10500 | de |
internal.pdf.valid | false | |
internal.pdf.wellformed | true | |
internal.pdf.encrypted | false | |