当代俄罗斯的民族主义争论。四种视角的语言在行动

Veera Laine
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摘要

本文从历史的角度分析了民族主义概念在俄罗斯的运用。它基于对2000年至2020年期间产生的文本材料的四项实证研究。在此期间,特别是在所谓的“保守转向”之后,俄罗斯的国家领导层对-à-vis社会采取了越来越专制的政策,并开始将俄罗斯描绘成受到外部威胁的国家。克里米亚被吞并以及2014年乌克兰战争爆发,巩固了俄罗斯近期政治变化被描述为“民族主义抬头”的说法。在这种时间背景下,研究表明民族主义话语目前正在发生变化,并在学术和日常语言中追踪这些变化。民族主义在日常语言中的负面含义影响了它的学术使用,这就是为什么本研究阐述了民族主义作为一个分析概念的各个方面,以及这个概念与术语本身之间的复杂关系。遵循批判民族主义研究的传统,本文将“民族”视为一种政治主张,这种主张源于语言的建设性过程。本文借鉴了概念历史的修辞传统,分析了民族主义话语中的具体概念、隐喻和叙事,作为构建政治的一种手段。同时使用语言的方式定义了实际策略的边界。更具体地说,政治家的修辞选择描绘了属于一个国家的条件,适时地对人们的生活产生了真正的影响。
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Nationalism as an argument in contemporary Russia. Four perspectives on language in action
This dissertation analyses the uses of the concept of nationalism in Russia from a historical perspective. It is based on four empirical studies examining textual material produced between the years 2000 and 2020. During this time, and after the so-called “conservative turn” in particular, the state leadership in Russia adopted increasingly authoritarian policies vis-à-vis society, and started to portray Russia as being under an external threat. The annexation of Crimea and the onset of the war in Ukraine in 2014 solidified the way in which recent political changes in Russia were characterised as “growing nationalism”.   In this temporal context, the study suggests that nationalist discourses are currently shifting, and traces these shifts in scholarly and everyday language. The negative connotations of nationalism in everyday language affect its scholarly use, which is why the aspects of nationalism as an analytical concept, as well as the complex relationship between the concept and the term itself, are expounded in the study. Following the tradition of critical nationalism studies, the dissertation approaches the ‘nation’ as a political claim that results from a constructive process in language. The dissertation draws on the rhetorical tradition of conceptual history in analysing specific concepts, metaphors and narratives within nationalist discourses as a means of framing politics. The way language is used simultaneously defines the boundaries of actual policies. More specifically, the rhetorical choices of politicians map the conditions of belonging to a nation, duly having real implications for people’s lives.
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