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Ideas, ideology & intellectuals in search of Russia's political future

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 11:42 authored by Elena Chebankova

The intellectual discourse of any state can function within two broad paradigms: consensual and pluralistic. In the first case, political elites, intellectuals, and the public agree on the base parameters of what constitutes “the good life” and argue about the methods of application. In the second case, participants hold radically different, incommensurable views, which coexist in society. This essay argues that the Western political system broadly rests on the politics of liberal consensus, formed throughout the period of capitalist modernization. But Russia's history took a different turn, following a path of alternative modernization. This engendered the politics of paradigmatic pluralism, in which a number of radically different politico-intellectual frameworks struggle for the dominant discourse. This essay examines these paradigms and argues that, due to the nature and substance of these models, fundamental change of Russia's dominant discourse, along with its main politico-institutional parameters, is unlikely.

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Science Executive Office (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Daedalus

Volume

146

Issue

2

Pages/Article Number

76-88

Publisher

MIT Press for American Academy of Arts and Sciences

ISSN

0011-5266

eISSN

1548-6192

Date Submitted

2017-04-06

Date Accepted

2016-09-24

Date of First Publication

2017-03-27

Date of Final Publication

2017-04-03

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-04-04

ePrints ID

26910

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    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

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