A short history of the Russian Revolution

IF 1.3 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES Canadian Slavonic Papers Pub Date : 2023-04-03 DOI:10.1080/00085006.2023.2200681
Christopher J. Ward
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引用次数: 98

Abstract

policies to counteract Russian imperialism and incorporate the people of the former Russian Empire into the new Soviet Union. These aspirations took place amid periods of profound transformation, upheaval, and violence, and, as Avrutin argues, the Soviet internal passport, with one’s nationality designated on line five, “facilitated the systematic identification, removal, and, in some cases, physical execution of entire populations by ethnic criteria” by Stalin and by the Nazis during World War II (65). While racial violence decreased after World War II and Stalin’s death, Avrutin writes that everyday experiences of racism persisted, despite Soviet disavowals of race and racism. In the final chapter, Avrutin analyzes the rise in xenophobic attitudes and racial violence in post-Soviet Russia. While he contextualizes these changes with respect to the socioeconomic trauma and demographic transformations of the 1990s, this period still seems like a sudden break between the Soviet disavowal of race and celebration of diversity and the turn towards white power that emerged in the aftermath of the Soviet Union’s collapse. Serguei Oushakine’s The Patriotism of Despair: Nation, War, and Loss in Russia (2009), Viktor Shnirel′man’s “Porog tolerantnosti”: Ideologiia i praktika novogo rasizma (2011), and Vladimir Malakhov’s body of work provide insight into this period, but there is a gap in the literature more broadly on understandings of race and ethnicity during the late Soviet period (for an exception, see Jeff Sahadeo’s Voices from the Soviet Edge: Southern Migrants in Leningrad and Moscow, 2019). Finally, while beyond the scope of Avrutin’s book, paying attention to shifting notions of Russianness and its relationship to whiteness is especially important as a future line of research, as made only too clear by Russia’s recent acts of violence and genocide against Ukraine. Throughout the book, Avrutin captures the complexities of processes of racialization, balancing how Russia fits within global discourses while also paying attention to local dynamics. Short and accessible, yet rich with detail, Racism in Modern Russia would therefore work well in a variety of Russian and Soviet history courses as well as in social science courses that focus on contemporary Russia or on comparative studies of race globally.
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俄罗斯革命简史
反对俄罗斯帝国主义的政策,并将前俄罗斯帝国的人民纳入新的苏联。这些愿望发生在深刻的变革、动荡和暴力时期,正如阿夫鲁廷所言,苏联内部护照,在第5行指定国籍,“促进了斯大林和纳粹在第二次世界大战期间根据种族标准对整个人口进行系统的识别、驱逐,在某些情况下,对整个人口进行了身体上的处决”(65)。虽然种族暴力在第二次世界大战和斯大林去世后有所减少,但阿夫鲁丁写道,尽管苏联否认种族和种族主义,但种族主义的日常经历仍然存在。在最后一章,阿夫鲁丁分析了后苏联时期俄罗斯仇外态度和种族暴力的上升。虽然他将这些变化与20世纪90年代的社会经济创伤和人口结构转变联系起来,但这一时期似乎仍然是苏联对种族的否认和对多样性的庆祝与苏联解体后出现的向白人权力的转变之间的突然中断。谢尔盖·奥沙金的《绝望的爱国主义:俄罗斯的民族、战争和损失》(2009年)、维克托·什涅尔曼的《波罗格宽容的民族主义》:《意识形态与进步》(2011年)和弗拉基米尔·马拉霍夫的作品为这一时期提供了深入的见解,但在苏联后期对种族和民族的理解方面,文献中存在更广泛的空白(作为例外,请参阅杰夫·萨哈迪奥的《来自苏联边缘的声音:列宁格勒和莫斯科的南方移民》,2019年)。最后,虽然超出了阿夫鲁丁的书的范围,但关注俄罗斯性观念的转变及其与白人的关系,作为未来的研究方向尤其重要,俄罗斯最近对乌克兰的暴力和种族灭绝行为已经清楚地表明了这一点。在整本书中,阿夫鲁丁捕捉到了种族化过程的复杂性,平衡了俄罗斯如何融入全球话语,同时也关注了当地的动态。《现代俄罗斯的种族主义》简短易懂,但细节丰富,因此适用于各种俄罗斯和苏联历史课程,以及关注当代俄罗斯或全球种族比较研究的社会科学课程。
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来源期刊
Canadian Slavonic Papers
Canadian Slavonic Papers ETHNIC STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
25.00%
发文量
61
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