Naród i nacjonalizm rosyjski w doktrynie eurazjatyzmu Aleksandra Dugina
- Year of publication: 2014
- Source: Show
- Pages: 41-57
- DOI Address: https://doi.org/10.15804/athena.2014.41.03
- PDF: apsp/41/apsp4103.pdf
In this article the author analyse the ideas of Russian nation and Russian nationalism in the Eurasian doctrine of Alexander Dugin and tries to situate the Eurasian nationalism among other nationalist doctrines, basing on classifications of Russian nationalism. The author concludes that this theorist propagates a vision of the Russian nation as a imperial, geopolitical and civilisational community, composed of Slavic and Turanian ethnic groups, cultures and religions, cemented by one civilization, an imperial idea, an eschatological, universal mission, affirming a superiority of the spiritual and geopolitical issues over the biological (blood, race). Therefore this is a type of so-called statocratic (state) nationalism, but with many features of a type of cultural nationalism. This nationalism can also be classified into group of nationalisms known as “empire-savers”.