«He Sighed from His Heart and Began to Gather Soldiers»: Emotions in Russian Political Narratives
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Political functions of demonstrative emotional behavior have been extensively studied by Western
medievalists, but little, if at all, discussed by scholars of Rus. This article offers an analyis of representations
of emotions in Russian political narratives; it is informed by the concept of Spielregeln («rules of play»),
developed by the German historian Gerd Althoff, and by application of anthropological theories to the
medieval studies practiced by Anglophone scholars, such as Stephen White and Paul Hyams. These historians
showed that societies lacking explicit normative documents regulated political and social interaction by means
of implicit «rules of play» manifested in ritual behaviors. Public display of emotions was probably the most
prominent among such behaviors. A comparison of information derived from Russian primary sources with
the picture that emerges from scholarly literature on emotions in political narratives of the high medieval
West suggests that social functions of emotions and the ways to send a political message by means of public
emotional display were essentially the same in Rus and Latin Europe.