Russian National Myth in Transition
Contributor(s)
Kisseljova, Ljubov (editor)
Language
Russian; Czech; Slovak; Estonian; EnglishAbstract
Acta Slavica Estonica is an international series of publications on current issues of Russian and other Slavic languages, literatures and cultures. This volume is part of the subseries Studia Russica Helsingiensia et Tartuensia, XIV, and unites scholars from Estonia, Finland, Russia, Ukraine, Germany, and Canada who belong to the tradition of the Tartu Lotman school. This collective monograph explores the development of national myth on the basis of a variety of materials from Russian culture, beginning from the Late Middle Ages and finishing with the Soviet epoch. The main part of the study is devoted to the Imperial period — the epoch during which the notion of nation arises. Analyzing the mechanisms used to construct national ideology, the authors especially stress the participation of literature and art in nation building: the role of the press, theatre, writers and their works in their dependence upon historical matters and political conjuncture.
Keywords
Russian culture; Russian literature; national myth; national ideology; nation building; patriotism; identity constructionISBN
9789949327485, 9789949327478Publisher
University of Tartu PressPublication date and place
Tartu, 2014Series
Acta Slavica Estonica, 6Classification
Russia
Society and culture: general
Popular beliefs and controversial knowledge
General and world history
Social and cultural history