
A History Of Russophobia And Its Living Legacy In World Affairs With Proof Of Election-meddling And The Relationship Between Donald Trump And Vladimir Putin An Ongoing Conundrum, Little Wonder Many Americans Are Experiencing What Historian Mark B. Smith Calls The Russia Anxiety. This Is No New Phenomenon. Time And Time Again, The West Has Judged Russia On Assumptions Of Its Inherent Cunning, Malevolence, And Brutality. Yet For Much Of Its History, Russia Functioned No Differently-or At Least No More Dysfunctionally-than Other Absolutist, War-mongering European States. So What Is It About This Country That So Often Provokes Such Excessive Responses? And Why Is This So Dangerous? Russian History Can Indeed Be Viewed As A Catalog Of Brutal Violence, In Which A Rotation Of Secret Police-from Ivan The Terrible's Oprichina To Andropov's Kgb And Putin's Fsb-hold Absolute Sway. However, As Smith Shows, There Are Nevertheless Deeper Political And Cultural Factors That Could Lead To Democratic Outcomes. Violence Is Not An Innate Element Of Russian Culture, And Russia Is Not Unknowable. From Foreign Interference And Cyber-attacks To Mega-corruption And Nuclear Weapons, Smith Uses Russia's Sprawling History To Throw Light On Contemporary Concerns. Smith Reveals How The Past Has Created Today's Russia And How This Past Offers Hints About Its Future Place In The World-one That Reaches Beyond Crisis And Confrontation.
This book investigates the historical origins and persistent nature of Western Russophobia, questioning why Russia consistently provokes extreme reactions in global politics. Historian Mark B. Smith utilizes his expertise to analyze the long-standing assumptions regarding Russian malevolence and brutality. By examining the evolution of Russian governance from the era of Ivan the Terrible to the modern administration of Vladimir Putin, Smith argues that Russia's history is often misinterpreted through a lens of inherent dysfunction rather than as a complex, evolving state. He posits that understanding these historical patterns is necessary to move beyond the current cycle of crisis and confrontation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and readers frequently note the book's success in providing a necessary historical counter-narrative to contemporary media portrayals of Russia. Experts highlight this as a useful resource for those seeking to understand the deep-seated cultural and political roots of current international tensions.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190886064
ISBN-13:
9780190886066
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