Symbolic Politics of Georgia and Azerbaijan in Russia: Two Research Cases
- 作者: Volkhonsky M.A.1, Yarlykapov A.A.1
-
隶属关系:
- MGIMO University
- 期: 卷 20, 编号 3 (2020): Russia’s Foreign Policy in the 21st Century: Views from Inside and Outside
- 页面: 605-618
- 栏目: 应用分析
- URL: https://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/view/24631
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.22363/2313-0660-2020-20-3-605-618
如何引用文章
全文:
详细
One of the most actively discussed topics in modern political science is symbolic politics. This topic looks especially relevant in relation to the former Soviet republics, which are actively operating within the framework of the symbolic component of politics. Based on an interdisciplinary approach to the study of symbolic politics, the article analyzes two cases related to the symbolic politics of the two republics of the post-Soviet space - Georgia and Azerbaijan, respectively. The first case refers to an attempt by the leadership of the Georgian Orthodox Church to obtain permission from the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian authorities to transfer the ashes of Georgian kings Vakhtang VI and Teymuraz II from Astrakhan to Tbilisi. The second case studies the circumstances of the construction of a monument in Dagestan near Agachaul to Turkish soldiers who died here in 1918 during the Civil war. The two cases presented in the article are interesting primarily because they allow us to see the methods of symbolic politics using concrete examples. In both cases, the actors were not state structures, but religious, social, and scientific organizations. The main method of the actors was to organize a commemorative campaign, around which an information campaign was then built, with the aim of replicating a certain interpretation of historical events. At the same time, cases differ from each other in the degree of openness and scale of actions of actors. In the first case regarding the transfer of the ashes of Georgian tsars, the Georgian side directly addressed both the leadership of the Russian Orthodox Church and the leadership of Russia. At the same time, the actions undertaken by the Georgian side were not successful. In the second case, the Azerbaijani side actively used the local commemorative campaign, initiated by local communities in Dagestan, to launch an appropriate wide information campaign. A comparison of cases leads to the conclusion that the success of a symbolic policy does not depend on the scale of the actions taken.
作者简介
Mikhail Volkhonsky
MGIMO University
编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: VolhonskyMA@yandex.ru
PhD in History, Senior Research Fellow, Center for Caucasus Problems and Regional Security
Moscow, Russian FederationAkhmet Yarlykapov
MGIMO University
Email: itbal@mail.ru
PhD in History, Senior Research Fellow, Center for Caucasus Problems and Regional Security
Moscow, Russian Federation参考
- Assman, A. (2014). The Long Shadow of the Past. Memorial Culture and the Politics of History. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie publ. (In Russian).
- Assman, A. (2016). New Discontent with Memorial Culture. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie publ. (In Russian).
- Assman, Y. (2004). Cultural Memory. Writing, Memory of the Past, and Political Identity in the High Cultures of Antiquity. Moscow: Yazyki slavyanskoi kulturi publ. (In Russian).
- Bezugolny, A.Yu. (2011). General Bicherakhov and His Caucasian Army. Unknown Pages of the History of the Civil War and Intervention in the Caucasus. 1917—1919. Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf publ. (In Russian).
- Bourdieu, P. (2005). Sociology of Social Space. Saint Petersburg: Aletheia publ; Moscow: Institut eksperimentalnoy sociologii publ. (In Russian).
- Edelman, M. (1985). The Symbolic Uses of Politics. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
- Efremova, V.N. (2015). On Some Theoretical Features of the Study of Symbolic Politics. In: Malinova, O.Yu. (Eds.). Symbolic Politics: Collection of Proceedings. Vol. 3. Moscow: INION RAN publ. Center for Social Information Research. Department of Political Science. P. 50—65. (In Russian).
- Halbwachs, M. (2007). The Social Frameworks of Memory. Moscow: Novoe izdatelstvo publ. (In Russian).
- Hatton, P.H. (2004). History as the Art of Memory. Saint Petersburg: Vladimir Dal publ. (In Russian).
- Kiselev, K.V. (2006). Symbolic Politics: Power vs. Society. Yekaterinburg: Diskurs-PI publ. (In Russian).
- Koposov, N.E. (2011). The Memory of a Strict Regime. History and Politics in Russia. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie publ. (In Russian).
- Malinova, O.Yu. (2013). Constructing Meanings: A Study of Symbolic Politics in Modern Russia. Moscow: INION RAN publ. Center for Social Information Research. Department of Political Science. (In Russian).
- Malinova, O.Yu. (2015). Actual Past: Symbolic Politics of the Ruling Elite and Dilemmas of Russian Identity. Moscow: Politicheskaya encyclopedia publ. (In Russian).
- Malinova, O.Yu. (2018). Politics of Memory as a Field of Symbolic Politics. In: Miller, A.I. & Efremenko, D.V. (Eds.). Methodological Issues of Studying the Politics of Memory: collection of proceedings. Moscow — Saint Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya publ. P. 27—53. (In Russian).
- Markov, A.S. (1976). The Authentic History of the Astrakhan region. Volgograd: Nizhne-Volzhskoe knizhnoe izd-vo publ. (In Russian).
- Miller, A.I. (2012). Historical Policy in Eastern Europe at the Beginning of the 21st Century. In: Miller, A.I. & Lipman, M. (Eds.). Historical Politics in the Twenty-First Century. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie publ. P. 7—32. (In Russian).
- Miller, A.I. (2018). Methodological Problems of Studying Memory Policy — Solved, Unsolved and Unsolvable. In: Miller, A.I. & Efremenko, D.V. (Eds.). Methodological Issues of Studying the Politics of Memory: collection of proceedings. Moscow — Saint Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya publ. P. 4—10. (In Russian).
- Nora, P. (1999). Between Memory and History. Problematics of Places of Memory. In: Nora, P., Ozouf, M., de Puymège, G. & Winock, M. France-memory. Saint Petersburg: Izd-vo SPbU publ. P. 17—50. (In Russian).
- Poceluev, S.P. (2012). “Symbolic Politics”: To the History of the Concept. In: Malinova, O.Yu. (Eds.). Symbolic Politics: Collection of Proceedings. Vol. 1. Moscow: INION RAN publ. Center for Social Information Research. Department of Political Science. P. 17—53. (In Russian).
- Pushkareva, G.V. (2015). Cognitive Mechanisms of Political Reality Construction. Polis. Political Research, 1, 55—70. (In Russian). doi: 10.17976/jpps/2015.01.06
- Safronova, Yu.A. (2018). Memory Studies: Evolution, Problems and Institutional Development. In: Miller, A.I. & Efremenko, D.V. (Eds.). Methodological Issues of Studying the Politics of Memory: collection of proceedings. Moscow — Saint Petersburg: Nestor-Istoriya publ. P. 11—53. (In Russian).
- Sevastyanova, Ya.V. & Efremenko, D.V. (2020a). Past and Future in the Soviet Metanarrative: the Relationship of National and Supranational. In: Miller, A.I. & Efremenko, D.V. (Eds.). The Politics of Memory in Modern Russia and Eastern Europe. Actors, Institutions, Narratives. Saint Petersburg: Izdatelstvo Evropeyskogo universiteta v Sankt-Peterburge publ. P. 40—60. (In Russian).
- Sevastyanova, Ya.V. & Efremenko, D.V. (2020b). Securitization of Memory and Dilemma of Mnemonic Security. Political Science, 2, 66—87. (In Russian). doi: 10.31249/poln/2020.02.03
- Strukov, V. & Apryshchenko, V. (2018). Memory and Securitization in Contemporary Europe. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK.
- Vachnadze, M., Guruli, V. & Bakhtadze, M. (1993). History of Georgia (from Ancient Times to the Present Day). Tbilisi: Tbilisskiy gosudarstvennyi universitet publ. (In Russian).
- Vardosanidze, S. (2015). The Servant of God: the Life feat of Elijah II, Catholicos-Patriarch of all Georgia. Moscow: Pravoslavnyi Svyato-Tihonovskiy gumanitarnyi universitet publ. (In Russian).
- Yerushalmi, Y.H. (2004). Zahor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory. Moscow: Mosty kultury publ.; Jerusalem: Gesharim publ. (In Russian).