Class as Ethnic: Rhetoric of the Russian Radical Nationalist Movement

Class as Ethnic:
Rhetoric of the Russian Radical Nationalist Movement


Sokolov M.M.,

PhD in Sociology, Professor of sociology department, European University at St. Petersburg, msokolov@eu.spb.ru


elibrary_id: 234420 | ORCID: 0000-0002-4102-7117 |


DOI: 10.17976/jpps/2005.02.12

For citation:

Sokolov M.M. Class as Ethnic: Rhetoric of the Russian Radical Nationalist Movement . – Polis. Political Studies. 2005. No. 2. P. 127-137. (In Russ.). https://doi.org/10.17976/jpps/2005.02.12



Abstract

Who and why are attracted by the Russian radical nationalist movement’s rhetoric? According to the point of view currently dominating the field of Russian nationalism studies, the movement is mostly supported by paranoid individuals reacting irrationally to the hardships of the transition period. The present article provides counter-evidence calling for an alternative interpretation of the nationalists’ appeal. Rhetorical analysis is applied to extract the main themes of the discourse of the RNU, the most infamous of the Russian radical nationalist organizations of the 1990s. Two of these themes, ethnization and moralization, are then interpreted from the perspective of P.Bourdieu’s theory of political field. It is demonstrated that they can be regarded as rational strategies of ideological struggle in the conflict over the distribution of cultural capital.


Content No. 2, 2005

See also:


Peregudov S.P.,
Transnational Corporations on the Way to Corporate Citizenship. – Polis. Political Studies. 2004. No3

Fyodorov K.G.,
The Policy in the Sphere of Local Taxation in Russia. – Polis. Political Studies. 2003. No4

Peregudov S.P.,
Corporate Capital and Power Institutions: Who Plays the Master?. – Polis. Political Studies. 2002. No5

Kazantzev A.A.,
Intelligentsia and Structural Innovations in Political Expanse (An Essay of Comparative Analysis). – Polis. Political Studies. 2007. No1

Sergeev V.M.,
How Are Social Changes Possible? (Prolegomena to a Statistical Theory of Social Networks). – Polis. Political Studies. 2001. No6

 
 

Archive

   2024      2023      2022      2021   
   2020      2019      2018      2017      2016   
   2015      2014      2013      2012      2011   
   2010      2009      2008      2007      2006   
   2005      2004      2003      2002      2001   
   2000      1999      1998      1997      1996   
   1995      1994      1993      1992      1991