Can Russia be grasped with the mind?
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The book criticized in this article is devoted to a very important and topical subject: the interaction
between the young Russian political science and the old Russian historical scholar. The authors want
to “return political science to history” and this intention one can only welcome. But the author of this
review was extremely surprised when he found the idea that for a better understanding of the current
political situation there is no need to immerse yourself in history. In the opinion of the reviewer, this
is a big mistake that prevents understanding modern Russian history and explaining it to readers. But
this error is a result of poor knowledge of Russian history and a mistaken attitude to historiography,
which is used very selectively. The analysis of all the provisions made by the authors has not allowed
the author of the review to agree with any of these provisions. This applies primarily to the interpretation
of “self-government” in Russia. Then to the understanding of the role of the so-called clan system
whose concept the authors took from a Western scholar. The authors were unable to demonstrate the
existence of it in modern Russia. Their idea about the identity of modern Russian political regime with
the regimes in Taiwan or Pakistan is amusing because the reviewer is sure that the West is West, East
is East, and Russia is Russia. The authors do not understand this, and therefore their predictions and
advices in connection with the future of Russia “hang in the air”. On this background, the last Chapter
in which the authors still want to appeal to history in search of answers to the challenges of modernity
looks quite curious. Since it is in contradiction with the authors’ previous statements, and as already
noted, they do not want to know the history, their excursions into history thus do not go beyond banal
and trivial findings. Final reviewer’s conclusion is: A. Lukin and P. Lukin are unable to “return politics
to the history” or, in other words, they are unable to enrich the political scholar with great historical
knowledge. Refs 11.
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Dvornichenko A. Yu. Can Russia be grasped with the mind? Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2017, vol. 62, issue 1, pp. 201–214.