Russia’s Relations Towards the West and the States in Post-Soviet Europe in the Works of Dugin, Solzhenitsyn and Narochnitskaya
Abstract
For Russia, the collapse of the USSR and the rise of a number of independent states meant a return to the territorial scale held by the country several hundred years ago. Today, this is the subject of extensive political, social, and intellectual discussions. Over the course of the post-Soviet development, we can observe a whole range of political representatives, scholars, and publicly influential individuals who call for the expansion of the Russian territory into regions previously ruled by Moscow, which is a demand that they support with a wide array of arguments. These are authors whose ideological backgrounds often differ; their resulting aims, however, are not dissimilar – their basic aim is to expand the contemporary Russian territory. The goal of this paper is to provide a comparative analysis of the ways in which three selected publicly influential individuals (Natalya Narochnitskaya, Alexander Dugin, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn) deal with the position of independent states in post-Soviet Europe. This paper examines the manner in which these authors evaluate the existence of these independent states and what motivations and legitimizing factors they use to support their demand for Moscow to expand both its influence and the present borders of the Russian Federation.
Keywords
Russia, Dugin, Narochnitskaya, Solzhenitsyn, imperialism, insularism, neo-Eurasianism, Atlantism
Author Biography
Vladimír Naxera
Vladimír Naxera who was born in 1986, is a lecturer and researcher at the Department of Politics and International Relations of the University of West Bohemia. His
dissertation/thesis was focused on corruption and its perception in the
post-communist Czech Republic. His current field of interest lies in the
instrumental politicization of history and field research of public political
ceremonies and their role in the processes of (re)enactment of specific
forms of discourses. He also deals with politics in Central Europe, the
contemporary Russian society, the Russian Orthodox Church and
(geo)politics in general.