Results 81 to 90 of about 205 (104)
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Alexander Dugin’s ‘times of troubles’ as paradigms of Russian history
International Politics Reviews, 2015Alexander Dugin, the seminal philosopher and journalist in post-Soviet Russia, was especially influential in the late Yeltsin/early Putin era. His visions of Russian history and the relationship between past and present reflect the views of many ethnic Russians who became quite disappointed with the results of the post-Soviet transformation.
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2020
This essay examines the historical thought of the contemporary Russian political philosopher Alexander Dugin (1962-). Dugin’s writings are the product of a complex intellectual development in the particularly fraught context of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the economic and political instability of the Yeltsin presidency and the ultimate emergence ...
Charles Robert Sullivan +1 more
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This essay examines the historical thought of the contemporary Russian political philosopher Alexander Dugin (1962-). Dugin’s writings are the product of a complex intellectual development in the particularly fraught context of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the economic and political instability of the Yeltsin presidency and the ultimate emergence ...
Charles Robert Sullivan +1 more
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Debatte, 2014
In post Soviet Society Europe emerged as a geographical symbol of everything positive that the end of the Soviet regime had brought to post Soviet urban Russians. At the same time the USA became the symbol of all that was negative in these changes. These attitudes had been shaped during the first years of Putin’s tenure.
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In post Soviet Society Europe emerged as a geographical symbol of everything positive that the end of the Soviet regime had brought to post Soviet urban Russians. At the same time the USA became the symbol of all that was negative in these changes. These attitudes had been shaped during the first years of Putin’s tenure.
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Alexander Dugin: philosopher or ideologue?
Studies in East European ThoughtRonald Beiner
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Against the thallasocracy: fascism and traditionalism in Alexander Dugin’s neo-Eurasianist philosophy [PDF]
This thesis discusses the ideological makeup of the Russian right wing philosopher Alexander Dugin. Tracing Dugin’s ideological influences from early Eurasianism, the European New Right and esoteric religious beliefs such as Perennial Traditionalism, the thesis then goes on to place Dugin’s body of thought within a larger debate on defining fascism and
Rushbrook, Jonathan
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The Ethnosociological and Existential Dimensions of Alexander Dugin’s Populism
Telos, 2020exaly +2 more sources
Österreichische Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft, Bd. 37 Nr. 1 (2008): Vergleichende Parteienforschung.
Höllwerth, Alexander
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Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, 2015
AbstractEvery historical phenomenon can be approached from different perspectives, and its particular attributes can be as important as being related to other structurally similar phenomena. The collapse of the USSR did not lead to absolute predominance of the USA even in the early post-Cold War era.
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AbstractEvery historical phenomenon can be approached from different perspectives, and its particular attributes can be as important as being related to other structurally similar phenomena. The collapse of the USSR did not lead to absolute predominance of the USA even in the early post-Cold War era.
openaire +1 more source

