A rich, multi-faceted and up-to-date introduction to the generally anti-Western body of thought known as Eurasianism. With Slavophile roots, Eurasianism saw the lands of the Russian and Soviet Empires as having a distinctive civilization. Taken up rhetorically by Putin, modern Eurasianism is extremely diverse, as it is caught between old imperial ambitions and regional patriotisms. -- David Christian, Professor, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Since 1991, the Russian Federation has been in search of a new national identity and global role, to conflicted and complex results. In this helpful new book, a team of experts address the ideological debates round the key concept of Eurasianism, and their roots in Russian thought, as well as their parallels in Central Asian, Turkish, and German history and contemporaneity. The result is a uniquely full and sophisticated picture of a body of thinking that is essential to understanding the region and its future. -- Catriona Kelly, Professor of Russian, University of Oxford
Eurasianism is a notoriously slippery concept, but Bassin and Gozo's volume shows how Eurasianist tropes form a lingua franca for political actors both within the post-Soviet space and without. As Moscow emerges as a regional hegemon and the lodestar for populist movements around the West, The Politics of Eurasianism provides clarity to a misunderstood issue. -- Timothy Nunan, Freidrich Meinecke Institute of History, Freie Universitat Berlin
Bassin and Pozo's The Politics of Eurasianism is an outstanding achievement, bringing together some of the world's leading scholars in the field to analyse the power of the Eurasianist discourse - based on the perceived commonalities of the territories of Russia's former empire in opposition to the West - not only to legitimise a range of domestic and foreign policy actions but also to shape post-Soviet cultural production. -- Richard Mole, Senior Lecturer in Political Sociology, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London
Developments of post-Soviet Eurasia, ranging from the evolution of Russia as a nation that is undergoing a major strategic transformation, to its remembrance as a global centre of geopolitical influence, to dramatic developments in Ukraine, stability of Central Asia, and others have gained attention. The Politics of Eurasianism is a timely comprehensive collection of essays aimed at offering an in-depth analysis of the philosophical and socio-cultural underpinnings of the complex processes associated with Russia's search of its own strategic identity and its missionary role within Eurasia and beyond. It offers a different angle at examining Russia's behaviour vis-a-vis Ukraine and the question of Eurasian idea and Eurasian identity. This is a must-read for scholars and students with interests in post-Soviet politics, post-communist societies, studies of nationalism and national identity. -- Alexey D Muraviev, Head, Department of Social Sciences and Security Studies, Curtin University, Western Australia