Borderland Russians
An edition of Borderland Russians (2010)
identity, narrative, and international relations
By Geir Hønneland
Publish Date
2010
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Language
eng
Pages
174
Description:
Geir H̜nneland discusses some of the big questions in social science: What is identity? How is it narrated by subjects? What is the role of identity and narrative in the study of international relations? The location is the Kola Peninsula, the most heavily militarized area of the world during the Cold War, now set to become Europe's next big oil playground. The author looks at how living close to the border affects people, and whether borderland people are different from other people. Above all, he asks empirical questions about identities in a specific geographic location, discussing what it means to be Russian, what it means to be a northerner and how people in Russia's north-western corner define themselves in relation to their Scandinavian neighbours and their southern relatives. This is a book about the nature of borderland Russians - living in the high north, hailing from the south, with Western neighbours within throwing distance across an increasingly permeable border.
subjects: Ethnicity, Case studies, International relations, Relations, Borderlands, Biography, Ethnic relations, Interviews, Russia (federation), foreign relations, Russia (federation), politics and government, Russia (federation), economic conditions, Außenpolitik, Ethnizität, Grenzgebiet, HISTORY, Identität, Internationale Politik, Linguistics, Minderheit, Nationalbewusstsein, Politics and Government, Regionale Identität, Rural communities
Places: Kola Peninsula, Kola Peninsula (Russia), Interviews, Scandinavia, Russia (Federation)