- Author:
Isaac Scarborough
- E-mail:
isaac.scarborough@gmail.com
- Institution:
University of London Senatei House, Great Britan
- Author:
Olga Brusina
- E-mail:
brusina@inbox.ru
- Institution:
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
- Author:
Shokhrat Kadyrov
- E-mail:
stepa54@mail.ru
- Institution:
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
- Year of publication:
2017
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
101-121
- DOI Address:
http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/npw2017305
- PDF:
npw/14/npw2017305.pdf
Scientific paradigm changes are frequently accompanied by the reconsideration of central terms and ideas. This article demonstrates how this process is currently underway in Russian anthropological studies [narodovedenie] as part of a broader move away from ethnography to theoretical ethnology. The article also shows lines of succession and divergence between various paradigms currently dominant in Russian anthropology, including primordialism and constructivism, and presents the author’s vision of a definition of “ethnicity”, instruments needed to study ethnicities, the nature of “ethnicity,” the underlying axioms on which ethnicities are conceptualized. An initial attempt has been made in the article to outline the central positions that would provide for a principally new ethnological paradigm by way of a new definition of the phenomenon of ethnicity.
- Author:
Isaac Scarborough
- E-mail:
isaac.scarborough@gmail.com
- Institution:
University of London Senate House, Great Britain
- Author:
Olga Brusina
- E-mail:
brusina@inbox.ru
- Institution:
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
- Author:
Shokhrat Kadyrov
- E-mail:
stepa54@mail.ru
- Institution:
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
- Year of publication:
2016
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
153-170
- DOI Address:
http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/npw2016210
- PDF:
npw/11/npw2016210.pdf
Scientific paradigm changes are frequently accompanied by the reconsideration of central terms and ideas. This article demonstrates how this process is currently underway in Russian anthropological studies [narodovedenie] as part of a broader move away from ethnography to theoretical ethnology. The article also shows lines of succession and divergence between various paradigms currently dominant in Russian anthropology, including primordialism and constructivism, and presents the author’s vision of a definition of “ethnicity”, instruments needed to study ethnicities, the nature of “ethnicity,” the underlying axioms on which ethnicities are conceptualized. An initial attempt has been made in the article to outline the central positions that would provide for a principally new ethnological paradigm by way of a new definition of the phenomenon of ethnicity.