Black Wind, White Snow: Russia's New Nationalism

Black Wind, White Snow: Russia's New Nationalism

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  • Author:Charles Clover
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Summary

A fascinating study of the root motivations behind the political activities and philosophies of Putin’s government in Russia

“Part intellectual history, part portrait gallery 。 。 。 Black Wind, White Snow traces the background to Putin’s ideas with verve and clarity。”—Geoffrey Hosking, Financial Times

“Required reading。 This is a vivid, panoramic history of bad ideas, chasing the metastasis of the doctrine known as Eurasianism。 。 。 。 Reading Charles Clover will help you understand the world of lies and delusions that is Eurasia。”—Ben Judah, Standpoint


Charles Clover, award-winning journalist and former Moscow bureau chief for the Financial Times, here analyzes the idea of "Eurasianism," a theory of Russian national identity based on ethnicity and geography。 Clover traces Eurasianism’s origins in the writings of white Russian exiles in 1920s Europe, through Siberia’s Gulag archipelago in the 1950s, the dissolution of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and up to its steady infiltration of the governing elite around Vladimir Putin。 This eye-opening analysis pieces together the evidence for Eurasianism’s place at the heart of Kremlin thinking today and explores its impact on recent events, the annexation of Crimea, and the rise in Russia of anti-Western paranoia and imperialist rhetoric, as well as Putin’s sometimes perplexing political actions and ambitions。

Based on extensive research and dozens of interviews with Putin’s close advisers, this quietly explosive story will be essential reading for anyone concerned with Russia’s past century, and its future。

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Reviews

Анатолій Бабинський

This is not an academic study but somewhat investigative journalism。 A rather excellent and concise description of how the "neo-Eurasian" idea flowed from one environment to another until, with Dugin's presentation, it entered the rhetoric of the Russian regime。 As for the shortcomings, the author seems to have "unlocked" this whole masquerade behind which Russian imperialism is simply hiding but still accepts what his interlocutors tell him at face value。 As for Ukraine, he does not know or und This is not an academic study but somewhat investigative journalism。 A rather excellent and concise description of how the "neo-Eurasian" idea flowed from one environment to another until, with Dugin's presentation, it entered the rhetoric of the Russian regime。 As for the shortcomings, the author seems to have "unlocked" this whole masquerade behind which Russian imperialism is simply hiding but still accepts what his interlocutors tell him at face value。 As for Ukraine, he does not know or understand it at all (perhaps this book would be different now, but not 100%)。 His picture is in the window of the correspondent bureau in Moscow。 Where everything around, including Ukraine, is a periphery without its subjectivity (for example, the Revolution of Dignity is described in it as a clash between "the West" and Russia, where Ukrainians are simply victims of the game of "the powerful of this world。" And there are a lot of such Russian propaganda stamps )。 The reading is interesting, but to a large extent, it is "reading from the surface。"Це не академічне дослідження, а скоріше журналістське розслідування。 Досить добрий і стислий опис того як "неоєвразійська" ідея (і ідея пасіонарності Гумільова) перетікала з одного середовища в інше поки з подачі Дугіна вона не увійшла в риторику російського режиму。 Щодо недоліків, то автор ніби й "розкусив" весь цей маскарад за яким просто ховається російський імперіалізм, але все одно місцями приймає з чисту монету те, що йому говорять його співрозмовники。 Щодо України, то її він цілком не знає і не розуміє (можливо тепер би ця книга була іншою, але не 100%)。 Його картинка - це вікно "корпункту" в Москві。 Де все, що навколо, включно з Україною, це периферія без власної суб'єктності (до прикладу, Революція Гідності в нього описана як зіткнення Заходу і Росії де українці просто жертви гри "сильних світу цього"。 І таких російський пропагандистських штампів там є чимало)。 Чтиво цікаве, але великою мірою є "зчитуванням з поверхні"。 。。。more

Jeremy

A compelling and well-reasoned overview of the philosophical underpinnings driving Putinism。 My biggest takeaway is that those of us on the American side should really take time to actually understand what these things mean instead of immediately jumping into conspiratorial Russophobia or, god forbid, an even further acceleration of reheated Cold War jingoism

Michael Michailidis

Informative yet biased An interesting record of “Eurasianism” from its early inceptors during the late 19th century to Alexander Dugin’s influence over the Kremlin。 But it’s also a record of our own, Western blindness to the roots of our liberal values。 Because Eurasionism is not the only ideology that escaped the realm of fantasy to “infiltrate reality” - as the author puts it - but is second to one much closer to home: Liberalism。

Murtaza

What ideology is driving modern Russian nationalism? Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine this February, this has transformed from an academic musing to an urgent political question。 Though carried out with modern weaponry, Russia’s war feels like a throwback to the brutal interstate conquests that brought Europe to collapse in the 19th and 20th centuries。 At at time when the whole world has seemingly come to a post-historical agreement on prioritizing commerce and globalization, Vladimir Putin What ideology is driving modern Russian nationalism? Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine this February, this has transformed from an academic musing to an urgent political question。 Though carried out with modern weaponry, Russia’s war feels like a throwback to the brutal interstate conquests that brought Europe to collapse in the 19th and 20th centuries。 At at time when the whole world has seemingly come to a post-historical agreement on prioritizing commerce and globalization, Vladimir Putin is sending divisions of tanks and troops across foreign borders, promising new wars to expand the borders of what would be in empire in all but name。 After the annexation of Crimea back in 2014, Angela Merkel was already warning that the Russian leader was trapped in “old patterns of thinking。” The extent to which she was right is now jarringly clear。This is not all coming from nowhere, nor merely as a response to the past missteps of the West。 Putin is pursuing a specific idea that would exist even without NATO。 The Soviet Union in which he was raised was an empire that had a grand ideological mission that gave its citizens a sense of purpose。 Since its collapse, the enfeebled Russian state that replaced it has had nothing comparable to fill the void; until now。 “Black Wind, White Snow,” by former Financial Times Moscow bureau chief Charles Clover is an analysis post-Communist Russian nationalism, that zeroes in on a vague, obscure idea that has now come to the center of Russia’s new national identity as promoted by its elites: “Eurasianism。” Published in 2017, the book is an intellectual history of this idea and how it crept from the extreme margins of the Soviet Union to become useful to Russia’s post-Communist elites。 Russia has always been divided between Westernizers (Peter the Great was the paradigmatic example) who saw Russia as a European country, and romantics who held to the idea of Russia as a distinct civilization, a Eurasian one, that had little to do with the West at all。 The balance of power between these two ideas has ebbed and flowed over generations。 During the Communist Era, when there was a hunger for non-Communist ideas in general, amateur intellectuals like Lev Gumilev imagined a different origin of Russian civilization that would help give meaning to both its past and present。 Gumilev laid the foundation for the Eurasian idea, starting his writings about it while a prisoner in the Soviet gulag。 He had many eccentric and poorly sourced beliefs about the true origins of Russian history, as well as the unique Russian character and soul。 Suffice to say that the impact of intergalactic solar rays on the Russian people do not go unmentioned。 More interestingly, Gumilev argued history that the experience of rule by the Mongol Golden Horde was formative in giving Russia its unique character, something that was expressed even in the collectivism of Soviet society。 From the Mongols, and other bordering Eurasian peoples, Russian developed deep values of communalism, traditionalism, and “passionarity,” a term that roughly denotes a willingness to take risks and self-sacrifice for a collective。 Gumilev invented the word, and it has been cited on more than one occasion by Vladimir Putin himself in speeches to the public。 Because Russians are Eurasians, a land-based, conservative people, they are by nature destined to clash with the liberal and cosmopolitan Atlanticists, who have always threatened and hated Russia and by their ineffably nature always will。Over a century or so, Gumilev’s idea of Eurasianism, which, importantly, contains unique political directives for Russia, has slowly crept from the margins to take on a significant role in modern Russian political discourse。 Its most famous exponent today is Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian fascist intellectual who studied under Gumilev and who has published widely on the subject。 Dugin is among Russia’s most well-known and influential political exports, and has become something of a traveling activist for the Eurasian idea – building ties with countries like Iran and Serbia that are deemed ethnic or ideological natural allies of a Eurasian Russia。 Though he had documented ties with Russia’s security services in the 1990s, the nature of Dugin’s ongoing influence on the Kremlin remains a matter of speculation。 Dugin has nonetheless written numerous popular books that have been taught in Russian military academies and have gained an audience on the Western far-right, including “The Foundations of Geopolitics,” and “The Fourth Political Theory。” In addition to scathing attacks on liberalism, these works described Russia as a country with an urgent historical mission to fight liberalism and preserve local cultures that necessitates a clash with the globalizing West。 His works have clearly struck a chord with many。 This was how Dugin described the response to reading his book by Russian security elites living after the collapse of the Soviet Union:“It was a kind of psychotherapy for them…Imagine the shock they were feeling: they had always been told the US is our enemy。 Suddenly some democrats come to power, and they say, no, the US is our friend。 Because there is no ideology。 They were all confused。 Their job is to aim missiles and they need to be clear…This was once an elite caste, responsible for huge institutes, thousands and thousands of warheads。 And suddenly, these democrats come and take away everything from this hugely respected caste。 And nobody offers them anything。 I come to them and say, ‘America is our enemy, we must aim our missiles at them,’ and they say ‘Yes, that is correct。’ And I explained why。”Besides an excuse for post-Soviet security elites to maintain their caste power, what does “Eurasianism” actually mean? The answer is not really clear。 You could summarize it as the belief that Russia is a civilization that promotes traditional values inspired largely by Orthodox Christianity, that it has its own unique historical experiences, that it is anti-liberal, that it is always under threat by the West, and that it is linked historically to neighboring peoples over whom modern Russia needs to expand its political control。 With those rough guidelines, much can be justified。 In modern Russia, the fight against global capitalism that gave mission to the Soviet Union has been replaced with a new fight against global liberalism。 The ability of Russia to prosecute this war on the same scale as the Soviets did is greatly reduced。 As Putin is now showing in Ukraine, however, there is the will to try。 One of the strangest quirks of Eurasianism, an idea that holds that Russians are naturally a unique people embodying the undying spirit of the Mongol Horde, is that no one seems to fully believe in it。 It’s most prominent proponents even seem to view it in an instrumental and ironic way。 Dugin openly muses in his writings about ideology being a means of manipulating the masses to achieve material ends, with the actual content of the ideology being of limited importance。 It’s a view shared by many elites in Russia。 This cynical view of ideology makes sense for a generation of men who were raised with the official state hypocrisy of the Soviet Union and are comfortable operating in an environment where everyone merely pretends to believe in what they say。 This is a stark contrast with liberal Europe and the United States where sincere belief in the ideology of liberalism as a universal capital-T truth is widespread。Clover’s book, published in 2017, began to be written well over a decade earlier purely as an academic exercise to understand where Eurasianism came from。 But in his own words it was after the 2014 Russian invasion of Crimea that the project started to take on a darker, more urgent character。 I have noticed that a new issue of the book is scheduled to be released later this year in light of the even more shocking war now raging across eastern Ukraine, an event that seems to vindicate his thesis about Eurasian expansionism further。 What I took away from his intellectual genealogy of Eurasianism was not that it’s a serious idea, but that Russian elites had felt deeply humiliated and disoriented by the collapse of the Soviet Union and needed an ideology that could give them a new sense of mission。 They are now in the midst of reclaiming the imperial sphere of influence once claimed by the Soviet Union – a mission justified and rationalized in the writings of men like Gumilev and Dugin – and are doing so by any means necessary and at any cost。 Dugin seemed to predict in his books both the 2014 war in Crimea and present one in eastern Ukraine with eerie specificity。 His writings predict more Russian conquests still。 The idea that Putin’s wars will end if and when Ukraine is conquered seems laughable。 They’re only getting started。The U。S。 has mishandled aspects of its relationship with Russia by failing to respect it as an equal。 Regardless of how it happened though, the Russian state today is completely radicalized。 The prospect of ramped up defense spending by the U。S。 does not please me at all。 But after coming to a deeper understanding of what is driving Russian expansionism against its neighbors, I feel like it’s probably prudent to give the Ukrainian government as many billions of dollars of advanced arms as necessary to help grind the Russian war machine to a halt and perhaps dissuade it from launching more wars still。 Putin and those around him are operating with an entirely different map of the world, an alternate reality of a Russian-centered empire spanning across Asia and Europe, which they are now trying to bring into existence with brute force。 While most countries have accepted an End of History focus on globalization and trade, Russians are re-enchanting the world。 Fantastical as it is, Eurasianism is a useful tool to help pursue this aim。 And like any other fantasy, it can only really be stopped by harsh confrontation with reality。 Orwell described this apparently timeless dynamic best, and I’ll let him conclude:"We are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we were right。 Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield。" 。。。more

Katia N

It is quite interesting book trying to trace the ideology of "Russki Mir" currently prevailing in Russian state and initially promoted by a chap called Dugin among the others。 It tries to find a connection through the 20th century from Eurasian movement of the emigrants in the 20s and to Lev Gumilev's pseudo-scientific paradigms of the 70-80s and to the modern day with Dugin and co。 The author did not convince me all these "theories" are connected, never-mind begotten from each other。 But the st It is quite interesting book trying to trace the ideology of "Russki Mir" currently prevailing in Russian state and initially promoted by a chap called Dugin among the others。 It tries to find a connection through the 20th century from Eurasian movement of the emigrants in the 20s and to Lev Gumilev's pseudo-scientific paradigms of the 70-80s and to the modern day with Dugin and co。 The author did not convince me all these "theories" are connected, never-mind begotten from each other。 But the story is well told。 The most interesting, shorter parts were about Trubetskoy, the linguist and the duke and about Gumilev-junior life。 Gumilev, the son of Anna Akhmatova, an iconic Russian poetess and Nikolay Gumilev, another poet shot in the 20s。 Lev has spent almost all his youth in gulag。 He went there twice。 He joked that once he went to pay who was his father and the second time - mother。 He was released after Stalin death in the 50s。 And since then he studied ancient tribes。 Crudely He claimed that the Russians are ancestors from the Eastern hordes from the Steppe。 And that is where Russia belongs to, not the West。 He has become substantially anti-semitic in the second part of his life。 He did not talk to Akhmatova for the last 6 years of her life。 Counter-intuitively he was very saddened when the Soviet Union collapsed。 I am not sure whether it was because a Stockholm syndrome or a nostalgy about the greatness of the Empire。 Interesting, very tragic and quite odious character。But the big part is devoted to the later years, Dugin and other figures in the post-soviet Russia。 He was an Nazi in his Soviet youth。 Then decided to combine it with the orthodox christianity in some proportions, updated his views on the thinking of the post-war radical right like Julius Evola and some French of Belgium character。 I do not remember his name, but cannot be bothered to check again。 It has moved from the open aggressive racism to open aggressive nationalism combined with imperialism。 Another defining feature of all of this is against so-called 'antlantism"。 Dugin has branded himself as a scientist and has written a lot。 The most famous is Foundations of Geopolitics: The Geopolitical Future of Russia: English Translation where he pondered about who is supposed to take it all eventually。 It was not taken seriously initially but has become progressively more and more on demand as Russia moved back towards aggressive totalitarism (or whatever you want to call it)。 According to Dugin Russians are so special:“we are less pragmatic (the Russians), less calculating than representatives of other peoples, and we have bigger hearts。 Maybe this is a reflection of the grandeur of our country and its boundless expanses。 Our people have a more generous spirit。" Amplified by the mass media, the message was hammered home over and over again: Russia is unique, Russia is different, Russia is superior, Russia is under attack, Russia must defend itself [the comments from the author]。”He was of course not the first who quipped such things。 Apart from anything else it was all over some prominent writers since 19th century minimum。 Dostoyevsky comes to mind as a first reference, but the list is frustratingly long。 When I was reading this part about Dugin and co, my prevailing feeling was of a revulsion。 Prevailing thought was that all this "theory is a plethora of science but in essence the mixture of messianic exceptionalism with the right-wing rhetoric borrowed from you guessed the west radical right。" This is from this book。 So "all I've taken before for the mysterious enigmatic Russian soul, all that messianism is appeared to be an ordinary fascism"。 Not sure where I've seen this sentence first。 It is not mine。 But indeed I totally agree with it based upon this book and the current events。Here is the one from Dugin on the subject:I cannot be bothered to write more about all of this。 Just leave a few excepts from the book here。Excepts:According to Dugin:‘lunar Putin’ – a concept he seems to have concocted in the midst of his social-media rage: There are two identities to Putin – the patriotic, heroic (solar) and the one inclined toward liberalism and compromises of the West (lunar)。 Therefore it is impossible to rule out that the decision to dismiss me was taken by one half, obviously the lunar … The solar Putin is the saviour of Russia during the Second Chechen Campaign, liberator of Ossetia and Abkhazia, and hero of the Crimea。 The lunar … Let everyone himself guess where the lunar is …course, we are less pragmatic, less calculating than representatives of other peoples, and we have bigger hearts。 Maybe this is a reflection of the grandeur of our country and its boundless expanses。 Our people have a more generous spirit。8 Amplified by the mass media, the message was hammered home over and over again: Russia is unique, Russia is different, Russia is superior, Russia is under attack, Russia must defend itself。Liberalism is ‘an updated version and continuation of a Western universalism that has been passed from the Roman Empire, Medieval Christianity, modernity in terms of the Enlightenment, and colonization, up to the present-day’, wrote Dugin in what was probably his most significant book since The Foundations of Geopolitics, entitled The Fourth Political Theory, published in 2009。19 Drawing on his readings of the European New Right, Dugin channelled the philosophy of as many ex-Nazis as he could lay his hands on – the political theories of Carl Schmitt, the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, the geopolitical theories of Karl Haushofer, and the traditionalism of Julius Evola – into a profoundly anti-liberal metaphysical project。。。In Dugin’s capable hands, Mackinder was transformed from an obscure Edwardian curiosity who never got tenure at Oxford, into a sort of Cardinal Richelieu of Whitehall, whose whispered counsels to the great men of state provided a sure hand on the tiller of British strategic thinking for half a century, and whose ideas continue to be the strategic imperatives for a new generation of secret mandarins。 In addition to Mackinder, there were the opposing geopoliticians profiled by Dugin, mostly German, who argued from the same logic as Mackinder but in defence of continental land power rather than global sea power。 These included Friedrich Ratzel, a late nineteenth-century German geographer who coined the term Lebensraum, or ‘living space’, which later was co-opted as an imperative by the Third Reich。 The second generation of geopolitical writings earned the theory a lingering association with Nazism。 Mackinder’s contemporary Karl Haushofer was a German army general and strategic theorist who was a strong proponent of a three-way alliance between Berlin, Moscow and Tokyo。Dugin’s main argument in Foundations came straight from Haushofer’s pages: the need to thwart the conspiracy of ‘Atlanticism’ led by the US and NATO and aimed at containing Russia within successive geographic rings of newly independent states。 The plan was simple: first put the Soviet Union back together, counselled Dugin, and then use clever alliance diplomacy focused on partnerships with Japan, Iran and Germany to eject the United States and its Atlanticist minions from the continent。 The key to creating ‘Eurasia’ is to reject a narrow nationalistic agenda which could alienate potential allies。 He quoted New Right theorist Jean-François Thiriart, who said ‘the main mistake of Hitler was that he tried to make Europe German。 Instead, he should have tried to make it European。’ Russia, it followed, would not be making a Russian Empire, but a Eurasian one。3 ‘The Eurasian Empire will be constructed on the fundamental principle of the common enemy: the rejection of Atlanticism, the strategic control of the USA, and the refusal to allow liberal values to dominate us’, wrote Dugin。Foundations was premised on the notion – an easy sell to a conspiracy-mad reading public – that real politics took place behind a veil of intrigue, according to rules that the elites and regimes of the world had internalized for centuries behind their bastions of privilege, but were loath to demonstrate publicly。 It came with all the esoteric trappings of an initiation to secret wisdom: runic inscriptions, arcane maps with all manner of arrows and cross-hatching, introductions to unheard-of grey cardinals of world diplomacy。 But there were just enough actual facts in support of the fantastic conclusions for the reader (I must admit, I was one) to be instantly intrigued – just as players at a Ouija board are often most impressed when the planchette lands on some fact of which they are already aware。German-Russian alliance would reorient Europe away from Atlantic influence and towards Eurasia。 France would be encouraged to orient towards Germany, which would cement the Eurasian vector of Europe around a ‘Moscow–Berlin–Paris’ axis: The tendency towards European unification around Germany [Dugin never uses the term ‘European Union’] will have positive significance only on one fundamental condition – the creation of a firm geopolitical and strategic Moscow–Berlin axis。 By itself Central Europe does not have enough political and military potential to gain independence from the Atlantic United States。Why empire? The essence of a uniquely messianic nation。 Outside empire Russians lose their identity and disappear as a nation。 Author:Helped by large oil surpluses and the devaluation of the rouble in 1998, Russia’s economy began to boom。 The elusive middle class that Western reformers hoped would be a bulwark of democracy and civil society was instead fashioned by an authoritarian, paternalistic system。 Rising incomes were supposed to lead to greater acceptance of liberal values。 But the opposite was happening。 The new middle class thought they owed their better fortune to Putin and to the social compact they believed they had made with him – giving away their freedoms in exchange for rising incomes。 Products of the 1990s, they associated democracy with social anarchy and impoverishment。According to one study [beginning of 00s], ‘A mood which was formerly concentrated in the Soviet Communist subculture and limited to those with poor education, low income, and non-urban groups, has started to penetrate the layers of society which until recently acted as the agents of modernization’。1 Some 79 per cent of Russians, for example, felt the end of the USSR to have been a mistake, compared with 69 per cent in 1992; 56 per cent saw NATO as a ‘bloc of aggression’ rather than a defensive alliance, an 18 percentage point rise since 1997。 One of the largest subcategories to subscribe to this view included those with higher education (68 per cent)。 Increasingly, nationalism was becoming the centre of gravity in Russia’s domestic politics, and the Kremlin struggled to keep pace with this mood。 The Kremlin’s efforts to centralize power were mirrored in the centralization of the production of images and symbols。 Pavlovsky was the public face of the Kremlin’s efforts at political technology, and during Putin’s first term he and his Kremlin handlers oversaw a shift in politics and the media away from the liberal parties and voices of the Yeltsin era, and towards a preponderance of more conservative and nationalist figures, to which they recruited Dugin and his Eurasianists。 。。。more

Jimmy

Do you want to understand what drives the thinking of Putin’s foreign policy outlook especially in light of the consequences of what’s going on in Ukraine? This book would be an important work you don’t want to miss。 The reason I read this book was to better understand what’s going on in Russia that shapes their foreign policy especially with the war that happened in 2022 with Ukraine after I saw it was quoted frequently from a master’s thesis on Alexander Dugin, Putin’s so called Rasputin。 The Do you want to understand what drives the thinking of Putin’s foreign policy outlook especially in light of the consequences of what’s going on in Ukraine? This book would be an important work you don’t want to miss。 The reason I read this book was to better understand what’s going on in Russia that shapes their foreign policy especially with the war that happened in 2022 with Ukraine after I saw it was quoted frequently from a master’s thesis on Alexander Dugin, Putin’s so called Rasputin。 The subtitle of the book is “The Rise of Russia’s New Nationalism。” The book traces the origin and development of an idea call Euroasianism and while the subtitle is “Nationalism” Eurasianism is Russia’s political outlook that is a hybrid of Russian supremacy blended with a call for the people of the Steppes and former Soviet republics in Russia’s orbit to be one civilization。 Eurasianists would see the heartland of Russia and other Eursasians are in a clash of civilization with Atlantists and coastal and Island base people。The preface explains a bit of the author’s background in Russia covering decades of current events and even having interviewed key figures in the book such as Alexander Dugin。 An introduction follows that talks about Putin and after that the meat of the book consists of 15 chapters grouped in three parts that traces the ideological genealogical history of how Eurasianism developed。 Part One begins in 1920 where the Bolsheviks have taken over Russia and the “White Russians’ opposing them are crumbling。 In this chaotic scene Prince Nikolay Trubetskoy is evacuated by an American warship on the southern tip of Crimea while on vacation and escapes to Europe。 Trubetskoy along with his friend Roman Jakobson would start the Prague School of structural linguistics but their view of Russian history would lay the ground work for Eurasianism。 Part two looks at Lev Gumilev who popularized Eurasianism within the Soviet Union。 Whereas Trubetskoy and Jakobson were outside Soviet Russia forming their ideology Gumilev lived within the Soviet Union。 Part three then looks at how Eurasianism goes from Gumilev to the next generation especially with a focus on Alexander Dugin towards the end of the book。The overall sense I get with Eurasianism is how it has appeal to some even though its founders have repudiated it, those who told lies about it have retract it and even then the movement remains。 The movement is driven by conspiracy, inaccurate history of various people group, and false science such as the idea from Gumilev who thinks cosmic rays makes Russians strong。 Plus leaders then and now are caught up with the occultic and occultic symbols。 This movement is so whacky。It is interesting to note the focus of the book in terms of how much pages are devoted to individuals and era。 While part two seems to have the least chapters compared to the other parts there is one chapter titled “Gulag” that was the longest chapter in the book and has 118 footnotes。 It is incredible how much work the author spent on Gumilev I almost wonder if originally the book was going to be just only on Gumilev’s life and philosophical outlook。 I did wish there was more focus and discussion of our contemporary Alexander Dugin himself。 Still the book gives us a lot of information about Dugin that I didn’t know before。 Even before I read this book Alexander Dugin is super concerning。 I think Dugin became even more concerning after I learned what I learned from the book。 It is ironic that right now in 2022 Russia has argued that they are intervening in Ukraine to denatzify Ukraine。 But it is strange that the architect for much of Putin’s foreign policy outlook is Dugin, a man who since his youth has a fascination with glorifying the Nazis。 Dugin teaches at the Academy of the General Staff of the Russian military, and his best seller Foundations of Geopolitics is required reading at the academy that train Russian generals。 So we now have decades of Russia’s core generals buying into Dugin’s geopolitical outlook which unfortunately has led these men to see conspiracies and the West as their enemies on the basis of a lot of false history and literally adopted Nazi ideologies。 I think it is fair to say that Eurasianism is influenced by Nazi ideology even more so than the controversy of Critical Race Theory is influenced by Marxism; its just less known by the public。 The influence on Dugin’s geopolitical views include Friedrich Ratzel who coined the term Lebensraum (“living space”) something the Nazis used heavily (234)。 Dugin’s book The Fourth Politicla Theory uses the political theory of Nazi legal theorist Carl Schmitt with land versus sea civilization (239), the geopolitical scholar Karl Haushofer, Nazi advocate of traditionalism Julius Evola and philosopher Martin Heidegger。 It seems the criteria for Russia’s military intervention in Ukraine to get rid of Nazis can be turned around as an argument by other countries to say they should invade Russia; note I’m not saying other countries should do that but rather I’m pointing out how Russia does have a log in their eye after all if Russia can invade Ukraine because of the Azov Regiment how much more problematic is a Nazi ideological influence in Russia’s outlook and strategy。 This book was written in 2015 and chillingly notes that Dugin even think Russia should annex Ukraine (238) and that Russia should “kill kill kill” Ukrainians。 Freighting to me is how Dugins’ outlook doesn’t seem to stop with only Ukraine: Dugin sees the need to have Germany ally with Russia against the “Atlantists” (237)。 There’s so much more I want to say but in summary there’s a lot more contents than I can discuss in this review。 The book definitely puts Eurasianism in context and also gives us rare information about Dugin that comes from the author’s research and also interview with Dugin。 The discussion about past generation’s Eurasianists also feature the author’s research into previously classified Soviet KGB archives。 There’s so much treasure trove of information。 I recommend this book。 。。。more

Grayson Ruhl

A deep and comprehensive dive into the origins of Russia’s current political world view。 A good book to read for anyone trying to understand how Russia has gotten to this point in international relations。

Jarno Mehtiö

Enempi henkilöitä ja heidän historiaansa peilaava teos。 Toki myös teoriat tulevat tutuksi。 Dugin, Lev Gumilev (Ahmatovan ja hänen kuuluisan runoilijamiehensä poika), Limonov yms。 Selvittää, miten pitkä historia Euraasian ajatuksilla on ja miten ne nostivat päätään 90-luvulla armeijan piirissä。 Olisi pitänyt lukea ensin Snyderin Road to Unfreedom。

billyskye

It is hard to escape the idea that Putin’s ‘Eurasia’ has become, in some sense, a geographical border around a separate truth。 A century ago, the original Eurasianists gave birth to a new continent, a fictitious one, which over the decades has become more and more real; at the same time, Russia, a real entity, has become more and more fictional。As Russia’s barbaric war in Ukraine grinds on, it is surprising how little attention has been paid to Charles Clover’s excellent intellectual history of It is hard to escape the idea that Putin’s ‘Eurasia’ has become, in some sense, a geographical border around a separate truth。 A century ago, the original Eurasianists gave birth to a new continent, a fictitious one, which over the decades has become more and more real; at the same time, Russia, a real entity, has become more and more fictional。As Russia’s barbaric war in Ukraine grinds on, it is surprising how little attention has been paid to Charles Clover’s excellent intellectual history of the ‘Eurasianism’ movement。 Black Wind, White Snow adds a valuable dimension to analysis of the conflict and its origins, tracing the mutation of this viral ideological strain through three generations of Russian thinkers – ultimately lending Vladimir Putin a language, an organizing principle, and perhaps even a personal belief system (though who is really to say on that front) through which his disastrous campaign of terror might be waged。 The book is divided neatly into three sections – each generation given a protagonist around which its flirtations with Eurasianism are concentrated。 First, the progenitor – Prince Nikolai Trubetzkoy – a linguist who fled the Russian Revolution and, from the salons of Europe alongside figures like Roman Jakobson and Pyotr Savitsky, extrapolated tenuously on his study into isoglosses, ultimately concluding that “cultures and civilizations have natural boundaries that delineate the extent of the unconscious architecture of a unique cultural geometry” and that “these natural cultural boundaries buttressed the argument for the common political identity of Eurasia and put into practice the fundamental axiom: the cause of all geopolitical misfortune that had befallen the Russian Empire was the non-recognition of the frontiers of natural systems。” While Trubetzkoy ultimately came to regret his involvement in the movement, it was too late。 His pseudoscientific ideas had already begun to metastasize。 Next comes the haunted son of famed Russian poets Nikolai Gumilev and Anna Akhmatova。 A historian interested in the peoples of the steppe, Lev Gumilev is introduced and mentored by Savitsky during their time in the gulag。 Building off the ideas of the old guard, Gumilev begins to develop his concept of ‘passionarity,’ a quantifiable characteristic embedded to different degrees within ‘ethnoi’ that described their “desire to sacrifice themselves, and the highest level of ‘complementarity’, a sense of attraction of its members for each other。” Weaving a prideful (and self-serving) mythology for his ethnic heritage, he argued that “The tribes, societies and nations which flourished were not the most rational, enlightened or advanced, he theorized, but rather those that contained the highest proportion of passionaries。” Clover provides a detailed portrait of Gumilev’s persecution by the Soviet bureaucracy, his exhaustive attempts at gaining academic respect and recognition, and, ultimately, the bizarre directions in which his theory took (it involves “cosmic radiation from outer space” and “the biogenic migration of atoms of chemical elements in the biosphere” of course)。 As one of the book’s many insightful sources puts it, “Gumilev smashed up everything。 He said two times two equals five。 And it was true。 Two times two equals four was simply boring。” People were paying attention。 Momentum was building。Finally, we arrive at Aleksandr Dugin, the enigmatic political philosopher often portrayed as something of an éminence grise to the modern Russian state。 Coming of age in Yury Mamleev’s subversive Yuzhinsky circle, Dugin gorged himself on occult samizdat and sought to break free of the older generation’s “passive willingness to accept the arbitrary diktat of a malfunctioning system, in exchange for the knick-knacks of a barely comfortable life。” In Eurasianism he found such an escape。 Fueled by an ambition to infiltrate the highest levers of power, Dugin attempted to do what his intellectual forebears found impossible – weaponize the ideology, mold it into a more infectious variant able to reach both the public and Russia’s siloviki。 In this endeavor, a flair for the theatrical, the conspiratorial was his constant ally because, as Clover notes, “The major advantage of conspiracy theories over reality is that reality is not logical, consistent and organized the way a conspiracy theory is。。。 totalitarian regimes found that conspiracy theories were always the easiest way of explaining ideology to an otherwise uninterested public。” Dugin is a man of many masks, Clover (who has interviewed the svengali extensively) writes, “Irony… was a constant companion to Dugin’s otherwise rather dire-sounding manifestos。 Dugin was simultaneously a critic, a theoretician and a practitioner of an art in which the three roles are (or should be) mutually exclusive。” Impossible to pin down。 Impossible to control。 Informing Dugin’s biography are colorful portraits of a coterie of political characters who would come to dominate Russia’s post-Soviet landscape – figures like Eduard Limonov, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Boris Yeltsin (“An empty vessel waiting to be filled: a man of white-hot ambition who had his finger on the national pulse and was willing to follow wherever that led。”), ‘political technologist’ supreme Vladislav Surkov, and, of course, Putin。 With the organizational capacity of communism degraded beyond repair, those in power sought to co-opt new ideologies that might cement their control of the Russian state and justify their dreams of reestablishing its empire。 Clover contends that Eurasianism “was seductive for Russia’s siloviki – the generals, security men, centurion guardians of the state – who had been consigned to irrelevance at the end of the Cold War by pronouncements about the ‘end of history’。 They wanted to be told that the fundamental reality of the world had not changed: nations still needed armies, spies, security services, strategic alliances and large defense budgets。” By viewing Russia as a fundamental watershed into which all of Eurasia flows – the core of a single, unimpeachable civilizational unit ordained by history and biology – Putin found a raison d'être for his increasingly fascistic kleptocracy。 As Clover puts it, “Eurasia’s appeal stems not from its accuracy or its explanatory power or its rigor (none of which it has), but from the way in which it exorcizes demons, heals psychic wounds and papers over ruptures in Russia’s crude and disjointed history。” All the better that this chimerical theory – mutated by three generations of fringe thinkers who barely seemed to believe in it themselves – is essentially bunk: “Putin has correctly surmised that lies unite rather than divide Russia’s political class。 The greater and more obvious the lie, the more his subjects demonstrate their loyalty by accepting it, and the more they participate in the great sacral mystery of Kremlin power by believing it。”It is interesting to note, as Clover does, that all three of his subjects were oppressed dissidents of the Soviet Union – and yet went on construct a movement animated by worship of its authoritarian empire, ultimately supporting a system quite similar in many ways to the one that had abused them for so long。 From a Western perspective, it is alluring to look at the failures of the communist experiment and conclude that the only viable alternative – the only avenue for opposition – would be ‘more West。’ However, Clover argues that for these men communism was viewed as a Western import and its mistakes lay in its constraint of the true ‘Eurasian’ character。 In other words, the only way forward was quite the opposite: more East。 Still, I had a little trouble squaring the psychoanalysis while reading and wouldn’t have minded further investigation of this trend。 That aside, the only flaw of Black Wind, White Snow results from the strength of its introduction, which is in some ways a victim of its own success。 It’s such a banger that the rest of the book, which essentially fleshes out the points already encountered in the first section, feels slightly deflated and baggy by comparison。 This is admittedly a rather pedantic critique, but I couldn’t help but feel at times like Clover tipped his hand a bit too early。 The triumph of Black Wind, White Snow lies less in its meticulous examination of the Eurasianist model (which, as Clover deftly shows, would be laughed out of any serious academic institution) and more in how it illustrates the eerie manner in which an idea can gather weight and ultimately manifest a physical form – an unserious hypothesis disavowed by a homesick, exiled linguist a century ago compels those in one nation to disregard the sovereignty of another, level their cities, commit unspeakable atrocities against their neighbors, their kin in the present day。 The hyperstitional element of this is equal parts fascinating and horrifying, almost Lovecraftian。 What power can the truth claim? Nurtured in an alluvium of disinformation, plausible deniability, meta-ironic equivocation, some eldritch thing from beyond the void was pulled into reality and now the fields of Ukraine are drenched in blood。 。。。more

Kitty

päris ajakohane lugemine。 seda juttu, et Venemaa on tsivilisatsioon ja peaks valitsema kogu Euraasiat ja nii, on viimasel ajal palju kuulda olnud, nii et päris huvitav ja vajalik teada saada, kust see kõik välja võetud on ja kes ja miks ja mis ajast saadik seda usub。Clover jutustab vene natsionalismi ja Putini praeguse retoorika (lühidalt öeldes: eurasianism) sünni meile kolme mehe elulugude kaudu: 1917。 aasta revolutsiooni käigus Venemaalt pagenud vürst ja lingvist Nikolai Trubetskoi, Stalini a päris ajakohane lugemine。 seda juttu, et Venemaa on tsivilisatsioon ja peaks valitsema kogu Euraasiat ja nii, on viimasel ajal palju kuulda olnud, nii et päris huvitav ja vajalik teada saada, kust see kõik välja võetud on ja kes ja miks ja mis ajast saadik seda usub。Clover jutustab vene natsionalismi ja Putini praeguse retoorika (lühidalt öeldes: eurasianism) sünni meile kolme mehe elulugude kaudu: 1917。 aasta revolutsiooni käigus Venemaalt pagenud vürst ja lingvist Nikolai Trubetskoi, Stalini ajal vangilaagrites vaevelnud Lev Gumiljov ja siis praeguseni elu ja tervise juures olev Aleksandr Dugin。 ja okei, Trubetskoist ja Duginist puudusid mul eelnevad teadmised ja arvamused, aga seda, kuidas Anna Ahmatova oma poega vangilaagritest tagasi ootas, Stalinile palvekirju esitas ja reekvieme kirjutas ja mis kõik, seda lugu ma ju ometi teadsin。 üldse ei osanud oodata, et esiteks ei saanud Gumiljov oma emaga õieti kunagi läbi (süüd selles tundub jaguvat mõlemale poolele) ja teiseks suutis ta ära näha N Liidu lõpu ja oli selle üle sügavalt õnnetu。noh, ja siis see, kuidas ta vangis istudes lihtsalt ajaviiteks igasuguseid teooriaid välja mõtles ja neid siis pärast ajaloo pähe avaldas ja inimesed lugesid ja neile see kõik meeldis。 (lugesin Sirbist Jaak Alliku muidu üsna kahtlase rõhuasetusega arvustust sellele raamatule ja minu meelest tema võrdlus Lennart Meri ja Valdur Mikitaga oli küll tabav。 ikka on ju tore lugeda raamatut, mis näitab su rahvast teistest iidsema, õilsama ja tähtsamana, eks?)samas jälle Duginist oli ka põnev lugeda, sest ikka päris uskumatu oli, millist vanakooli natsismi (haakristide ja Hitleri piltide ja juudiviha ja kõigega) 80ndate Venemaal harrastati。 pool aega mulle muidugi tundus, et Dugin ja ta sõbrad tegid sellist。。。 Kaur Kenderi ja/või Za/Umi tüüpi showd。 kindlasti oli neil endal hästi lõbus。kahjuks see Dugini-osa edenes mul jube aeglaselt, sest oli samal ajal ka Venemaa ajalugu 80ndate lõpust tänaseni ja kuigi seal oli kohti mu olemasolevatesse teadmistesse haakimiseks küll (näiteks polnud mulle viimased 30a meelde tulnud sellise organisatsiooni nagu Pamjat olemasolu, teile on või?), siis seda kõike oli ikkagi päris palju。 põhiline moraal oli, et kui me seni olime arvanud, et mõned Vene poliitikud olid aegajalt ikka okeid ka (Jeltsin, Gorbatšov), siis。。。 tegelt ei。 Putini pukkisaamise lugu ma ka enne ei teadnud (tl;dr: vene rahvas ütles arvamusküsitlusel, et kui valida oleks tuntud filmitegelaste vahel, siis presidendiks valiksid nad parima meelega Max Stirlitzi。 mõeldud, tehtud。)ja noh, kõik selle läbi lugenuna muidugi ei üllata enam absoluutselt mitte miski, mida see riik või selle juhid või rahvas teevad või ütlevad või arvavad。mind täiega jäi kummitama see pealkiri ja tundub, et see on võetud Aleksandr Bloki luuletusest, mida Clover raamatus ka tsiteerib, aga eesti keeles ja Johannes Semperi tõlkes seal seda musta tuult päriselt ei ole ikkagi, vaid paistab olevat must õhtu。 。。。more

Scott Martin

(3。5 stars) This work attempts to look at the history and evolution about Russia current national philosophy and governing style。 The Novayrussia and Eurasian school of thought go back over a century, as several key scholars and intellectuals sought to define what is was and is to be Russian。 This is not as readable or light as comparative reading between Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, but it has a purpose。There is a lot thrown into this book, and many a Western reader will learn far more than the my (3。5 stars) This work attempts to look at the history and evolution about Russia current national philosophy and governing style。 The Novayrussia and Eurasian school of thought go back over a century, as several key scholars and intellectuals sought to define what is was and is to be Russian。 This is not as readable or light as comparative reading between Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, but it has a purpose。There is a lot thrown into this book, and many a Western reader will learn far more than the my expected about Russian nationalist thought。 Still, the writing can get a bit dry and academic, and it can sometimes require more thought to get through than other works。 This should really be for the serous Russian scholar。 It would be interesting to see if the author sees things the same way since the invasion of Ukraine, etc (the cutoff for this book was 2014)。 。。。more

Ken

Learned about Dugin

Joel

Excellent historical work by Charles Clover on the history of Eurasianism, the hodge-podge philosophy peddled by Alexander Dugin。 It also functions as a mini biography of Dugin and several other figures in the esoteric circles of Russian politics。 In the wake of the Soviet collapse, Dugin latched onto the theory of "sea nations" like the USA locked into struggle with "land nations" like Russia。 Sprinkle in fascism, post-modernism, and Orthodoxy and you have the rough outline of Eurasianism。 Unfo Excellent historical work by Charles Clover on the history of Eurasianism, the hodge-podge philosophy peddled by Alexander Dugin。 It also functions as a mini biography of Dugin and several other figures in the esoteric circles of Russian politics。 In the wake of the Soviet collapse, Dugin latched onto the theory of "sea nations" like the USA locked into struggle with "land nations" like Russia。 Sprinkle in fascism, post-modernism, and Orthodoxy and you have the rough outline of Eurasianism。 Unfortunately this theory was adopted by Vladimir Putin and some around him, and is partially responsible for the war now underway in Ukraine。 Clover takes us through the history of these ideas and ends shortly after the annexation of Crimea in 2014。 。。。more

Alismcg

"As a geopolitician I take the pulse of Russian history – it is my pulse as well, my heart beats with the same rhythm as the heart of my country, my people。"--Dugina BIG namea review to follow "As a geopolitician I take the pulse of Russian history – it is my pulse as well, my heart beats with the same rhythm as the heart of my country, my people。"--Dugina BIG namea review to follow 。。。more

Can

2019 Eylül civarıydı, kıymetli bir arkadaşım bana bir koli kitap hediye ettiğinde okumaya başladım。 Anca bitti。 Tabi, bu süre çerçevesinde sadece onu okumadım ama kesinlikle "uzun okuma"lardanAvrasyacılığı çıkış noktasından itibaren detaylıca anlatıyor。 Kendinizi sıkça kitapta geçen isimler hakkında daha fazla şey ararken buluyorsunuz。 Rusya'ya ilginiz varsa mutlaka okuyun。Kullanılan dil görece akıcı。 2019 Eylül civarıydı, kıymetli bir arkadaşım bana bir koli kitap hediye ettiğinde okumaya başladım。 Anca bitti。 Tabi, bu süre çerçevesinde sadece onu okumadım ama kesinlikle "uzun okuma"lardanAvrasyacılığı çıkış noktasından itibaren detaylıca anlatıyor。 Kendinizi sıkça kitapta geçen isimler hakkında daha fazla şey ararken buluyorsunuz。 Rusya'ya ilginiz varsa mutlaka okuyun。Kullanılan dil görece akıcı。 。。。more

Bettie

https://bylinetimes。com/2019/04/15/th。。。 https://bylinetimes。com/2019/04/15/th。。。 。。。more

Анатолий Масленников

Ну, теперь всё стало понятнее!Хотя надо всегда делать поправку, что автор героев книги, и похоже что всех нас, (немного) ненавидит。И бывает что некритически выдаем мейнстрим-мнение (западное), хотя когда надо — вдается в нюансы и пишет, что не всё так просто。

Rebecca

If you're looking for a book on the far right in contemporary Russia which is not only focused on Putin, and which provides historical context, this is a very good place to start。 It's written in a journalistic style, includes interviews with key players, avoids hyperbole and sensation, and is well-documented if you want to read further。 It starts with the early Eurasianists in pre-Revolutionary Russia and concludes with the 2014 conflict over the Ukraine。 It's published by a university press, b If you're looking for a book on the far right in contemporary Russia which is not only focused on Putin, and which provides historical context, this is a very good place to start。 It's written in a journalistic style, includes interviews with key players, avoids hyperbole and sensation, and is well-documented if you want to read further。 It starts with the early Eurasianists in pre-Revolutionary Russia and concludes with the 2014 conflict over the Ukraine。 It's published by a university press, but would work well for a non-academic audience。 。。。more

Daniel

A worthwhile and clearly well-researched account of the rise of nationalist views in Russia today。 Despite the ambitious undertaking, the transition between the author's associations of previous and current players, beginning in 20th century Russia, and their impact with Kremlin thinking today was well written。 I did find certain sections of the book to be repetitive and did not mind。 Understandably, the legitimacy and/or motivations of certain events are questionable given large amounts of undo A worthwhile and clearly well-researched account of the rise of nationalist views in Russia today。 Despite the ambitious undertaking, the transition between the author's associations of previous and current players, beginning in 20th century Russia, and their impact with Kremlin thinking today was well written。 I did find certain sections of the book to be repetitive and did not mind。 Understandably, the legitimacy and/or motivations of certain events are questionable given large amounts of undocumented history。 Regardless, the author did a good job of tracing the origins of Eurasianism, "a theory of Russian national identity based on ethnicity and geography," from earlier writings and events during Soviet-Russia up until recent times。 Above all, this book is entertaining and does encourage further reading。 。。。more

Matti Paasio

If you want a good man to give you a summary of Putin and his "ideology," Charles Clover is your boy。 He convinced me to read Umberto Eco's FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM, and finish it, and that is saying something。 Everyone and their dog should read this book。 Hands down, it is the best of its kind。 If you want a good man to give you a summary of Putin and his "ideology," Charles Clover is your boy。 He convinced me to read Umberto Eco's FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM, and finish it, and that is saying something。 Everyone and their dog should read this book。 Hands down, it is the best of its kind。 。。。more

Teo Swee Wei

Informative, well-researched and compelling read。

Marks54

This is a good book about some strange people and some stranger ideas。 It is the intellectual history of "Eurasianism" that has developed as an expansive mutation of Russian nationalism and came into vogue to support the consolidation of power and foreign policy of Vladimir Putin, especially since he assumed a third term。 The basic argument (such as it may be) is a geopolitical argument for an enhanced Russia as the central power on the Eurasian land mass。 This idea is tied to the work of Halfor This is a good book about some strange people and some stranger ideas。 It is the intellectual history of "Eurasianism" that has developed as an expansive mutation of Russian nationalism and came into vogue to support the consolidation of power and foreign policy of Vladimir Putin, especially since he assumed a third term。 The basic argument (such as it may be) is a geopolitical argument for an enhanced Russia as the central power on the Eurasian land mass。 This idea is tied to the work of Halford Mackinder in political geography and the book features a famous illustration by Mackinder as used in Alexander Dugin's 1997 work on geopolitics。 The book profiles the work of a number of minor Russian scholars most of whom suffered under the Soviet regime, including Nickolay Trubetskoy, Lev Gumilev, and Alexander Dugan。 It then suggests how these ideas help motivate Russian political and military actions in Ukraine, the Crimea, and the Caucaus region。Why is this interesting? To start with, the recent actions of Putin have put Russia back into the limelight as it has not been since Communism went out of business。 A new generation has grown up since then and it is worth while to learn more about Russia since 2000。 The book is a nice history that way and what is important to me was not the ideas of Eurasianism but more how these ideas have been used to support the reestablishment of Russian autocracy。This book is useful in clarifying the audience for half-baked political ideas。 I had always assumed that political ideas were targeted towards the masses。 Clover's book shows that this is not the case。 The point is for the ideas to unify Putin's cronies so that everyone supporting the Putin regime can use these ideas to make sure that everyone in the ruling elite is "on the same page"。 This strange nationalist ideology is a management tool to enhance cohesion among rulers and administrators。 It does not make any difference that the ideas are bad ones - anyone who followed 2016 US presidential elections knows that whether ideas were true or reasonable had little to do with whether they were useful to the political class。 Clover's book also clarifies that Putin is no simple autocrat or closet communist but has crafted a blend of ideology, simplified Russian history, and dreams of global Russian expansion。 This is not to say that Putin is not a power hungry autocrat but rather that he has made use of a wide range of resources in gaining and enhancing his power。 The book is also valuable as one of many potential sources about the investigations of the Trump administration and its dealings with Russia。It is not surprising that these odd geopolitical ideas can still influence people。 Mackinder' work, even if discredited now, was very influential in its day。 This is true for the US where Mackinder's influence can be seen in association with the work of Alfred Thayer Mahan。 。。。more

Philip Girvan

A sweeping examination of the concept of Eurasianism that provides historical context and illustrative portrayals of the philosophy's present day gurus, particularly Aleksander Dugin。 Book does a formidable job of demonstrating how disillusionment with the fall of the Soviet Union, often most keenly experienced by those imprisoned and otherwise punished by the regime, led to Eurasianism's gaining currency within the military and eventually with President Putin。 Also quite revealing re its influe A sweeping examination of the concept of Eurasianism that provides historical context and illustrative portrayals of the philosophy's present day gurus, particularly Aleksander Dugin。 Book does a formidable job of demonstrating how disillusionment with the fall of the Soviet Union, often most keenly experienced by those imprisoned and otherwise punished by the regime, led to Eurasianism's gaining currency within the military and eventually with President Putin。 Also quite revealing re its influence on nationalist movements in Europe。 Clover has good contacts who are willing to speak to him openly。 It's a revealing book and a compelling read。 。。。more

Matthew Griffiths

This was an interesting account of a political philosophy which in recent years has gained increasing purchase。 The book does a lot to explain the intellectual background and development of the Euraisianist and modern Russian Nationalist thought starting from the time of the Revolution right through to the collapse of the Soviet Union and into current events。 The setting of the scene that the book starts with is a little long winded and would definitely put off all but the dedicated reader but t This was an interesting account of a political philosophy which in recent years has gained increasing purchase。 The book does a lot to explain the intellectual background and development of the Euraisianist and modern Russian Nationalist thought starting from the time of the Revolution right through to the collapse of the Soviet Union and into current events。 The setting of the scene that the book starts with is a little long winded and would definitely put off all but the dedicated reader but the discussion towards the latter end of the book looking at how much of this political thought has been applied since Putin's rise is worth sticking around for。 。。。more

Frederic

For me, this was a really annoying book that could have been about 250 pages shorter than its 330 pages。 Author Clover spends those first 250 pages plodding through esoteric linguistic theories and endless biographical details of a series of Russians who espoused a vaguely defined philosophy called "Eurasianism"。 Most of these Eurasianists evoke little sympathy, as they were propagandists or revisionists posing as historians。 An endless passage of what felt like 100 pages, about feckless, childi For me, this was a really annoying book that could have been about 250 pages shorter than its 330 pages。 Author Clover spends those first 250 pages plodding through esoteric linguistic theories and endless biographical details of a series of Russians who espoused a vaguely defined philosophy called "Eurasianism"。 Most of these Eurasianists evoke little sympathy, as they were propagandists or revisionists posing as historians。 An endless passage of what felt like 100 pages, about feckless, childish mythmaker Lev Gumilev, was especially annoying。 Clover tortures the reader with many references to Eurasianism, without explaining what the term means。 That definition, which shifts throughout the book, is finally clarified in the final chapter to be a sham mythology, hijacked by Putin and his cronies, to justify their reassembly of the former Soviet Union under another name。 I did learn that early failed Eurasianists Trubetskoy and Jakobson were brilliant linguists, but at a cost of several days of my life。 I would avoid this book at all costs。 On Russia, I much preferred "The New Cold War", "Lenin on the Train" and "It Was a Long Time Ago and It Never Happened Anyway"。 。。。more

Marshall

This is a really good book that looks at the development of Russia's latest right movement, Eurasianism。 The movement began as a linguistic attempt to show language kinship between steppe peoples。 Whatever the merits of this theory, which alleges Russian and Mongolian have closer connections to each other than the various other languages in the groups they belong to。 This theory was intended to show how Imperial Russia represented a single distinct group that despite ethnic differences in religi This is a really good book that looks at the development of Russia's latest right movement, Eurasianism。 The movement began as a linguistic attempt to show language kinship between steppe peoples。 Whatever the merits of this theory, which alleges Russian and Mongolian have closer connections to each other than the various other languages in the groups they belong to。 This theory was intended to show how Imperial Russia represented a single distinct group that despite ethnic differences in religion and societal institutions, were intended to remain together。This theory which was developed in the demise of the Tsarist empire and in exile by leading intellectuals later jumped to the field of history when Lev Gumilyov。 Gumilyov encountered the theory while in the gulag during one of his periodic stays due to having Anna Akhmatova as a mother。 He later formulated a theory of the history with regard to steppe peoples and the kinship among the Russian, Mongolian, and Turkic peoples。 The Russian empire's periodic battles with these people, the 200 year occupation of the former Kievan state by the Mongolian empire, the battle of Kulikovo, Ivan the Terrible's taking of Astrakhan were just "family quarrels。 Alexander Nevsky's struggles with the Teutonic Knights were carried out with the assistance of the occupying Mongols, thereby sparing Russia the questionable benefits of the West。 Almost as a way of getting back at his highly cultivated mother, whose genius led to Gumilyov's periodic incarceration, he invented Eurasianism。 Alexander Dugin embraced the anti western philosophy of Gumilyov and the extreme nationalism of the emerging "alt right" movement of the 1990s。 In the Post Soviet era, society had a communist party shaped hole that needed to be filled。 The nationalist undercurrents in Eurasianism provided a historically inaccurate and linguistically questionable basis for resentment against the West in the wake of the Soviet Union's collapse。 Eurasianism provides the newly emerged Russian state with a kind of unifying Russian historical myth that relies on the sort of alternative facts that are necessary when the truth is too awkward to acknowledge。 While some of the crazier aspects of the Eurasianist theory are not likely to be embraced by the Putin regime, at least not publicly, it provides a convenient unifying anti western justification for autocracy, something no Russian ruler would dismiss willingly regardless of the doubtful historical basis。 。。。more

Geza Tatrallyay

A very insightful analysis of where Russia is today, given historical trends。 Clover does a masterful job in explaining the rise of nationalism in Russia, and how it has come to be the centerpiece of current Russian political ideology。 It helps explain much of what is happening in the Ukraine and indeed the recent efforts by Putin and his gang to exert influence on the USA。 A must read for anyone interested in East/West relations。

Adam

Clover deftly ties together the various iterations of Eurasianism, combining Imperial, Soviet, and contemporary Russian versions into a cohesive narrative that is equal parts grounded history and journalistic flair。 Should be required reading for all academics who study Russian politics。

Mubeen Irfan

Russia is an intriguing country。 Possibly because of her Soviet past, closed society and culture of secrecy propagated by the country's establishment。 However, when she opened her gates in 1990s all hell broke loose and the country ended up making certain Billionaires who were later reined in by the deep state。 This book however is upon Russian nationalism or a concept known as Eurasianism。 Frankly, I had never read about this term before starting this book but it has become a very popular polit Russia is an intriguing country。 Possibly because of her Soviet past, closed society and culture of secrecy propagated by the country's establishment。 However, when she opened her gates in 1990s all hell broke loose and the country ended up making certain Billionaires who were later reined in by the deep state。 This book however is upon Russian nationalism or a concept known as Eurasianism。 Frankly, I had never read about this term before starting this book but it has become a very popular political movement in Russia。 The sudden rise of nationalism in many of the European countries, after this concept was banished post second world war 2, has been a cause of concern for world en masse。 This book details the birth and adaptation of Russia's own nationalism and how it is playing a big influence on Putin's actions in Europe。 Cases in example are Crimea & Ostessia。 It is a detailed account on the Russian philosphers who birthed this concept of Eurasianism and how their sphere of influence kept growing which in turn led to Kremlin owning their ideas。First half of the book, which is on the evolution of these ideas, is really boring。 It picks up pace later when the author details different actual events which happened in USSR & Russia and possible theories and motives behind them。 I especially liked the account of 1991's coup (or was it?) against Gorbachov。 Read it if you are a geo-politics fan but it might take a hundred and fifty pages or so to get any interesting。 。。。more

John Goodell

First off, Clover's book is about as close to an un-biased portrait of Putin's Russia as I have encountered。 Whether discussing the Crimean situation or the U。S。 military base in Kyrgyzstan, Clover presents all perspectives and cites sources from both sides。 Granted, towards the end he begins to side more with the Western view that Putin's rise and Russia's actions should be condemned, but he largely stays true to the historical texts and people who influenced the Eurasianist ideology。Any Wester First off, Clover's book is about as close to an un-biased portrait of Putin's Russia as I have encountered。 Whether discussing the Crimean situation or the U。S。 military base in Kyrgyzstan, Clover presents all perspectives and cites sources from both sides。 Granted, towards the end he begins to side more with the Western view that Putin's rise and Russia's actions should be condemned, but he largely stays true to the historical texts and people who influenced the Eurasianist ideology。Any Westerner who wants to better understand the long, often fraught relationship between the U。S。 and Russia, especially as it stands today, must pick up this book。 It's a very accessible read, regardless of your background in Russian history and politics, and reads more like a novel than anything else given the enigmatic characters involved in this truly incredible history。Clover masterfully traces Eurasianism from its early roots in pre-Soviet times, to its slow dissemination by professors and underground groups alike throughout the later Soviet period, and then finally its infiltration into the ranks of the Kremlin under Yeltsin and Putin。 Considering the suppression of orthodox Christian values during the Soviet era and a weakening sense of what it meant to be Russian, it is no surprise that Putin's nationalist sentiment has begun to take wind in recent years。 He timed it well with a rise in commodities prices during the 2000s, a period which saw the livelihoods of Russians increase substantially。 Of course, we can only speculate where Eurasianism will go from here, especially amidst the strengthening ties between Russia and China, and the financial rating agency the two countries have developed as a rival to the Western agencies responsible for deciding the quality of assets everywhere。"Eurasianism is a forgery that has superseded the original - not because it is a good forgery, but because it is so audaciously false that it undermines the true"-Clover 。。。more