2017
DOI: 10.1080/00905992.2016.1267133
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Becoming patriots in Russia: biopolitics, fashion, and nostalgia

Abstract: The article seeks to explore the common ground between biopolitics, fashion, patriotism and nostalgia. Taking off from the Foucauldian notion of biopolitics as a control apparatus exerted over a population, I provide an insight into the modern construction of the Russian nation, where personal and collective sacrifice, traditional femininity and masculinity, orthodox religion, and the Great Patriotic War become the basis for patriotism. On carefully chosen case studies, I will show how the state directly and i… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The topic of alcohol occupies a separate niche in cultural (Herlihy 2001;Schrad 2014) and sociological research (Nemtsov and Vågerö 2011;Radaev 2017;Radaev et al 2020). Despite the presence of studies focused on the material aspects of contemporary Russian patriotism (Gurova et al 2017;Kalinina 2017), food issues have received almost no attention (with the exception of Barsukova 2017;Yormirzoev et al 2019).…”
Section: Ambivalent Authenticities: Valuation Strategies In a Global Eramentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The topic of alcohol occupies a separate niche in cultural (Herlihy 2001;Schrad 2014) and sociological research (Nemtsov and Vågerö 2011;Radaev 2017;Radaev et al 2020). Despite the presence of studies focused on the material aspects of contemporary Russian patriotism (Gurova et al 2017;Kalinina 2017), food issues have received almost no attention (with the exception of Barsukova 2017;Yormirzoev et al 2019).…”
Section: Ambivalent Authenticities: Valuation Strategies In a Global Eramentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Russia: the immortal regiment, the blockade blood and the party of the dead Among a bulk of works written about the USSR and post-Soviet Russia, there is only a handful that approaches the topic from a wider biopolitical paradigm (Bassin 2016;Makarychev and Yatsyk 2018b;Kalinina 2017;Toropova 2015;Khagi 2011). Some focus on the Stalinist times (Sandomirskaya 2012;Prozorov 2016;Healey 2015), using the concepts of biopolitics and thanatopolitics through the lens of governing people's death to preserve the existing regime.…”
Section: Poland: Memory Politics Based On Martyrological Messianismmentioning
confidence: 99%