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Understanding impacts of "Russian orientalism" on post-Soviet elite-management in the Republic of Bashkortostan
Author(s) -
Melih DEMİRTAŞ
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cappadocia journal of area studies (cjas) cappadocia university
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2717-7254
DOI - 10.38154/cjas.28
Subject(s) - elite , orientalism , political science , soviet union , the republic , ancient history , history , law , philosophy , archaeology , politics , theology
The “Russian Orient” has as emerged as a popular area of study for specialists and political analysts with a predominant interest in Russia and Eurasia-related affairs. My primary aim in this work will be specifically to look deeper into this concept of the “Orient” inside Russia’s vast geography. Simultaneously, I will place emphasis on the Russian “otherization” process within this huge spatial realm, drawing upon a remarkable case study on Bashkiria, or to use its current official name, the Republic of Bashkortostan, in the Russian Federation. I will pose one general question to garner information on the current situation in Bashkortostan, being “How can we understand the political elite management process in this Federative Republic as a successful part of a general Russian-led Orientalist project?” In trying to find an answer to this question throughout the work, like in the imperial era, and as observed in the Soviet centralized totalitarianism, the post-Soviet state understanding in Russia will be treated as a kind of a “success story” in terms of its incorporation of large and varied segments of its population into its “orbit”.

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