
Today's Russian Intelligentsia: A New Role in the Post-Soviet Political Order
Author(s) -
Quintin Barnes
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
elements
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2380-6087
pISSN - 2378-0185
DOI - 10.6017/eurj.v5i2.8901
Subject(s) - intelligentsia , politics , political science , government (linguistics) , law , social class , value (mathematics) , interim , sociology , political economy , social science , philosophy , linguistics , machine learning , computer science
A vibrant intellectual class is an integral component in any healthy society. The intelligentsia developed in Russia in the nineteenth century and are historically defined by high moral principles, justice, freedom, rule of law, and their role as producers of the predominant Russian discourse. In the post-Soviet political paradigm, intellectual development was needed more than ever. However, instead of an emergent intellectual class free from government control, true intellectuals were unable to transform in the interim years and subsequently retreated from the function they historically performed. The intelligentsia were co-opted by the post-Soviet Russian government much as they were in the Soviet Union. Even the word has lost its social value today as a different class of social elites is increasingly promoted in media and political circles. Some groups still remain true to the traditional intelligentsia, but they are the few who keep this important Russian social class alive.