(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2019)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2018)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2017)
(2016)
(2016)
Special Issue - (2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2016)
(2015)
(2015)
Special Issue - (2015)
(2015)
(2015)
(2015)
(2012)
(2012)
(2012)
Special Issue - (2012)
pp. 5155-5163 | Article Number: ijese.2016.381
Published Online: August 11, 2016
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to analyze of Eurasianism, which began during the Russian scientific and philosophical emigration and has generated sharp discussion over the last century. Within the framework of Eurasianism, extensive research has been conducted on a wide range of interrelated topics, much of whose theoretical and practical significance is just beginning to be realized. The main objective of the article is the identification of various aspects of the national question, and its many issues which form the basis of Eurasian ethnosociology. Eurasianism has re-examined, among other issues, the inequality of national communities and the ways to eliminate this inequality, the conditions for fruitful interaction between ethnic groups, the nature of nationalism, and many more. Eurasianists have proposed a systemic and holistic approach to the national question, as an alternative to the prevailing ideas of today and, in the authors’ opinion, an appropriate heuristic, especially given the deepening of many national problems in the modern world.
Keywords: Eurasianism, the national question, nationalism, ethnosociology, common values
References
Alekseev, N. N. (1998). Russian people and the state. Moscow: Agraf.
Bahtin, M. M. (2013). Epistemology of social and historical knowledge (models of history and philosophical-anthropological representation). Moscow: VNIIgeosistem.
Bassin, M. (1991). Russia between Europe and Asia: The Ideological Construction of Geographical Space. Slavic Review, 50(1), 1-17.
Berdyaev, N. A. (1925). The Eurasianists. Path, 1, 134—139. Direct access: http://royallib.com/book/berdyaev_nikolay/evraziytsi.html.
Böss, O. (1961). Die Lehre der Eurasier. Ein Beitrag zur russischen Ideengeschichte des 20. Wiesbaden: Jahr-hunderts.
Farmer, K. C. (2012). Ukrainian nationalism in the post-Stalin era: myth, symbols and ideology in Soviet nationalities policy. Vol 4. Springer Science & Business Media.
Florovskiy, G. V. (1998). From past Russian thought. Moscow: Agraf.
Gumilev, L. N. (1990). Geography of ethnicity in the historical period. St. Petersburg: Nauka.
Halperin, Ch. (1982). George Vernadsky, Eurasianism, the Mongols, and Russia. Slavic Review, 41(3), 477-493.
Hantington, S. (1996). The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order. New-York: Rockefeller Center.
Horuzhiy, S. S. (1994). After the break. Ways of Russian philosophy. St Petersburg: Aleteiya.
Laruelle, M. (2006). The Eurasianist Ideology and the Eurasian history: Empire as the Natural Solution for the Post-Soviet Space?, 6th Annual International Young Researchers Conference “Orienting the Russian Empire”, Havighurst Center, Oxford-Miami University, Ohio, October 26-28, 2006.
Liberman, A. (1990). Trubetzkoy as a literary scholar. In N. S. Trubetzkoy. Writings on literature. Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press.
Panarin, A. S. (2002). Orthodox civilization in a global world. Moscow: Algoritm.
Riasanovsky, N. V. (1964). Prince N. S. Trubetskoy’s “Europe and Mankind”. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, 12.
Savitsky, P. N. (1997). Continent Eurasia. Moscow: Agraf.
Trubetskoy, N. S. (1995). Europe and humanity. Moscow: Progress.
Trubetskoy, N. S. (1995a). On True and False Nationalism. Moscow: Progress.
Vernadsky, G. V. (1997). History of Russia. Mongolia and Russia. Moscow: Agraf.
Williams, R. C. (1972). Culture in Exile. Russian Emigres in Germany, 1881–1941. London: Ithaca.