Image Studies in Examining Shared Perceptions of the Past: Two Russian Cases
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Historical image studies have been used successfully in analysing, for instance, representations
of «otherness». Despite of its certain restrictions, the approach can also be used in studying phenomena that
are more complex. In this article, two recent case studies, both concerning Russian historiography and the
formation of national narratives, are shortly discussed in order to ponder upon the applicability of the method
in examining collective perceptions of the past. The first case is about the formation of the historiographical
image of the borderland monastery of Valaam. The second one examines the development of the collective
ideas concerning the battle of Kulikovo (1380). It can be said that in the image formation of Valaam, the
emphasis is on spatiality, religion and contested frontier, whilst in the case of Kulikovo imagery, the ideas
of temporality, national significance and active, unified resistance prevail. What is common for both case
studies, however, is that the formation of the imagery has been intertwined with contemporary political
issues of each given time. The process has had a full support of the power structures. Also, there is strong
undercurrent of National Romanticist thinking connected to both of the cases. Both of the imageries have
been formed anachronistically, in hindsight. Especially in the case of Kulikovo this phenomenon has a central
role: the idea of the medieval battle as a crucial turning point is a prime example of explaining history in the
light of contemporary knowledge and the prevailing ideological undercurrents. In both cases it is possible
to analyze and trace the formation of separate images of certain scenes, turns and figures, and on the other
hand, examine them as a whole imagery.
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Parppei K. M. J. Image Studies in Examining Shared Perceptions of the Past: Two Russian Cases. Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana, 2019, vol. 2 (26), pp. 15–36.