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The Gumilev Mystique - Biopolitics, Eurasianism, and the Construction of Community in Modern Russia (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,900
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The Gumilev Mystique - Biopolitics, Eurasianism, and the Construction of Community in Modern Russia (Hardcover)
Series: Culture and Society after Socialism
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the legacy of the
historian, ethnographer, and geographer Lev Nikolaevich Gumilev
(1912-1992) has attracted extraordinary interest in Russia and
beyond. The son of two of modern Russia's greatest poets, Nikolai
Gumilev and Anna Akhmatova, Gumilev spent thirteen years in
Stalinist prison camps, and after his release in 1956 remained
officially outcast and professionally shunned. Out of the tumult of
perestroika, however, his writings began to attract attention and
he himself became a well-known and popular figure. Despite his
highly controversial (and often contradictory) views about the
meaning of Russian history, the nature of ethnicity, and the
dynamics of interethnic relations, Gumilev now enjoys a degree of
admiration and adulation matched by few if any other public
intellectual figures in the former Soviet Union. He is freely
compared to Albert Einstein and Karl Marx, and his works today sell
millions of copies and have been adopted as official textbooks in
Russian high schools. Universities and mountain peaks alike are
named in his honor, and a statue of him adorns a prominent
thoroughfare in a major city. Leading politicians, President
Vladimir Putin very much included, are unstinting in their deep
appreciation for his legacy, and one of the most important
foreign-policy projects of the Russian government today is clearly
inspired by his particular vision of how the Eurasian peoples
formed a historical community. In The Gumilev Mystique, Mark Bassin
presents an analysis of this remarkable phenomenon. He investigates
the complex structure of Gumilev's theories, revealing how they
reflected and helped shape a variety of academic as well as
political and social discourses in the USSR, and he traces how his
authority has grown yet greater across the former Soviet Union. The
themes he highlights while untangling Gumilev's complicated web of
influence are critical to understanding the political,
intellectual, and ethno-national dynamics of Russian society from
the age of Stalin to the present day.
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