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Russia's Political Culture in Transformation

Study Course Description

Course Description Statuss:Approved
Course Description Version:7.00
Study Course Accepted:09.02.2024 10:12:33
Study Course Information
Course Code:PZK_163LQF level:Level 7
Credit Points:5.00ECTS:7.50
Branch of Science:Politics; International PoliticsTarget Audience:Political Science
Study Course Supervisor
Course Supervisor:Deniss Hanovs
Study Course Implementer
Structural Unit:Faculty of Social Sciences
The Head of Structural Unit:
Contacts:Dzirciema street 16, Rīga, szfatrsu[pnkts]lv
Study Course Planning
Full-Time - Semester No.1
Lectures (count)10Lecture Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Lectures20
Classes (count)10Class Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Classes20
Total Contact Hours40
Part-Time - Semester No.1
Lectures (count)7Lecture Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Lectures14
Classes (count)7Class Length (academic hours)2Total Contact Hours of Classes14
Total Contact Hours28
Study course description
Preliminary Knowledge:
Knowledge of Russian culture and history.
Objective:
To provide students with the knowledge of the transformation of political culture in Russia within last 300 years, to foster common debates on elements of political culture, to provide insight into the definition of political culture within the paradigm of cultural studies, which imply that Russian political culture is shaped by various elements of culture, such as arts, literature, religion. During the course students will be offered a chance to combine their knowledge of politics with new theoretical views and methods from cultural studies. The course consists of three parts: 1. General theoretical paradigms of cultural studies and political culture; 2. The development of Russia`s political culture and history, since the beginning of the 17th century; 3. The framing of political culture – the influence of various sectors of political culture.
Topic Layout (Full-Time)
No.TopicType of ImplementationNumberVenue
1The notion of political culture and its place in the theory of cultureLectures1.00auditorium
2The notion of transformation in the concept of fluid modernity (Z. Bauman)Classes1.00auditorium
3How to analyze culture? The theoretical results of the cultural turnsLectures1.00auditorium
4Postcolonial turn and performative turn in the analysis of political transformationsClasses1.00auditorium
5Collective memory and history politics in the concept of transformationLectures1.00auditorium
6Analysis of Russia`s political processes in the media: phenomena chosen by students to analyse: democracy, state, minorities, pluralism, state leader, geopolitical priorities, construction of memoriesClasses1.00auditorium
7East or West? The third space? Russian history and its factorsLectures1.00auditorium
8Feudalism and rising absolutism in the 17th century. Muscovy state in the 17th century. Analysis of the image of Ivan the Terrible in the Soviet modernism movie by Serge EisensteinClasses1.00auditorium
9Westernization politics of Russian rulers in the early phase of the 18th century. Politics of Peter I in EuropeLectures1.00auditorium
10Imperial discourse in Russian political culture. Bysanthinian state symbols and Western Roman Empire as political imagery. The “Greek project” of Catherine IIClasses1.00auditorium
11Enlightenment politics in Russia. Views and concepts of Western Enlightenment on Russia and civilization discourse. Larry Wolf`s concept will be applied and critically examinedLectures1.00auditorium
12Nationalism in Russia. Empire and the nation in the nationalism discourse. Ethnic minoritiesLectures1.00auditorium
13Liberalism in Russia in the 19th century. Westerners and slavophilsClasses1.00auditorium
14The factor of religious culture. Orthodoxy and caesars imagery in the politicsLectures1.00auditorium
15Russian religious philosophy and geopolitics. The concept of Leontyev. Postcolonial paradigmClasses1.00auditorium
16Russian literature and dissidents` culture. From Radishev till DovlatovLectures1.00auditorium
17The concept of monarchy in the political culture. The Romanovs and images of Soviet leaders. Putin and iconography of a rulerClasses1.00auditorium
18Revolution and terror. 1917. Bolsheviks universalism and Stalin`s national bolshevism in the imperial discourseLectures1.00auditorium
19Traumatic collective experience and the politics of memory in contemporary Russia. War, catastrophy and victoryClasses1.00auditorium
20Democracy, Western politics and neo national movement. Entertainment culture and geopoliticsClasses1.00auditorium
Topic Layout (Part-Time)
No.TopicType of ImplementationNumberVenue
1The notion of political culture and its place in the theory of cultureLectures1.00auditorium
2The notion of transformation in the concept of fluid modernity (Z. Bauman)Classes1.00auditorium
3How to analyze culture? The theoretical results of the cultural turnsLectures1.00auditorium
4Postcolonial turn and performative turn in the analysis of political transformationsClasses1.00auditorium
5Collective memory and history politics in the concept of transformationLectures1.00auditorium
6Analysis of Russia`s political processes in the media: phenomena chosen by students to analyse: democracy, state, minorities, pluralism, state leader, geopolitical priorities, construction of memoriesClasses1.00auditorium
7East or West? The third space? Russian history and its factorsLectures1.00auditorium
8Feudalism and rising absolutism in the 17th century. Muscovy state in the 17th century. Analysis of the image of Ivan the Terrible in the Soviet modernism movie by Serge EisensteinClasses1.00auditorium
9Westernization politics of Russian rulers in the early phase of the 18th century. Politics of Peter I in EuropeLectures0.50auditorium
10Imperial discourse in Russian political culture. Bysanthinian state symbols and Western Roman Empire as political imagery. The “Greek project” of Catherine IIClasses0.50auditorium
11Enlightenment politics in Russia. Views and concepts of Western Enlightenment on Russia and civilization discourse. Larry Wolf`s concept will be applied and critically examinedLectures0.50auditorium
12Nationalism in Russia. Empire and the nation in the nationalism discourse. Ethnic minoritiesLectures0.50auditorium
13Liberalism in Russia in the 19th century. Westerners and slavophilsClasses0.50auditorium
14The factor of religious culture. Orthodoxy and caesars imagery in the politicsLectures0.50auditorium
15Russian religious philosophy and geopolitics. The concept of Leontyev. Postcolonial paradigmClasses0.50auditorium
16Russian literature and dissidents` culture. From Radishev till DovlatovLectures0.50auditorium
17The concept of monarchy in the political culture. The Romanovs and images of Soviet leaders. Putin and iconography of a rulerClasses0.50auditorium
18Revolution and terror. 1917. Bolsheviks universalism and Stalin`s national bolshevism in the imperial discourseLectures0.50auditorium
19Traumatic collective experience and the politics of memory in contemporary Russia. War, catastrophy and victoryClasses0.50auditorium
20Democracy, Western politics and neo national movement. Entertainment culture and geopoliticsClasses0.50auditorium
Assessment
Unaided Work:
The knowledge acquired in the course is tested during seminars, discussions on selected texts. Skills are acquired and evaluated by creating reports on course topics, submitting reports in e-studies. In the final examination, the student presents his / her report and participates in a discussion with colleagues on the problem issue analyzed in the report.
Assessment Criteria:
• Participation in the seminar on the selected course literature (min. 50 pages from the e-learning catalog) makes up 40% of the final course evaluation. • Execution of independent work tasks in the form of a report – 40% of the final assessment. • The exam assesses the student's ability to participate in a discussion of the results of the report – 20% of the final assessment of the course.
Final Examination (Full-Time):Exam (Written)
Final Examination (Part-Time):Exam (Written)
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge:Students will explain the stages of the development of Russian political culture. Students will describe the most important stages of the transformation of Russian political culture and the dynamics of their development over the last 300 years. Students will distinguish the concepts of cultural theories from the concepts and principles of political culture, as well as compare them.
Skills:Students will independently analyze texts on the development of Russian political culture over the past 300 years, critically selecting sources of information, presenting their conclusions and answering questions during seminars. Students will explain the dynamics of Russian political culture transformation in an argumentative and in-depth way and anticipate the development trends of Russian political culture in the perspective.
Competencies:Students will develop research based on interdisciplinary scientific literature, combining theoretical concepts of cultural and political science and applying them in the study of empirical elements. Students will interpret the assumptions made in theoretical knowledge in the context of Russia's current transformation processes.
Bibliography
No.Reference
Required Reading
1Stephen Welch. (2013).The Theory of Political Culture. Oxford University Press: Oxford.
2Zygmunt Bauman. Liquid modernity. (2000). Polity: London.
3Richard Handler. (2002). Cultural Theory in History Today. In: American Historical Review December, pp. 1512-1520.
4Victoria E. Bonnell, Lynn Hunt. (eds.) (1999). Beyond the Cultural Turn. New Directions in the Study of Society and Culture.University of California Press: Berkeley and Los Angeles.
5Patrick Brantlinger. (2002). A Response to Beyond the Cultural Turn. In: American Historical Review, pp. 1500-1511.
6Stephanie Lawson. (2011). Cosmopolitan Pluralism: Beyond the Cultural Turn. In: Cosmopolitan Civil Societies Journal, Vol.3, No.3, 2011. pp. 27-46.
7Erika Rappaport. (2008). Imperial Possessions, Cultural Histories, and the Material Turn: Response. In: Victorian Studies / Volume 50, no. 2, pp. 289-296.
8Gubenko I., Hanovs D., Malahovskis V. (eds.). (2016). The New Heroes. The Old Victims. Politics of memory in Russia and the Baltics. Riga: Zinatne, 2016.
9Neil Robinson. (2017). Russian Neo-patrimonialism and Putin’s ‘Cultural Turn’ In: EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES, 2017 Vol. 69, No. 2, March 2017, pp. 348–366
10David R. Marples. (2002). Motherland Russia in the 20th Century. Pearson Education Limited: London.
11Jarmo Kotilaine and Marshall Poe (eds.) (2004.) Modernizing Muscovy. Reform and social change in seventeenth-century Russia. RoutledgeCurzon: London.
12Paul Bushkovitsch. (2004). Peter the Great. The Struggle for Power, 1671-1725. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
13Nicholas V. Riasavovsky. (1985) The Image of Peter the Great in Russian History and Thought. Oxford University Press: Oxford
14Kelly O` Neill. (2017). Claiming Crimea: A History of Catherine the Great`s Southern Empire. Yale University Press: London.
15Gubenko I., Hanovs D., Malahovskis V. (eds.). 2016. The New Heroes. The Old Victims. Politics of memory in Russia and the Baltics. Riga: Zinatne, 2016. The article by Deniss Hanovs
16Alexander Polunov. (2005). Russia in the Nineteenth century: Autocracy, Reform, and Social Change, 1814-1914. M.E.Sharpe: Armonk, New York
17Eric Lohr (2003). Nationalizing the Russian empire. The campaign against enemy Alien during World War I. Harvard University Press: London.
18Alexei Miller. (2008). The Romanov Empire and Nationalism. Essays in the methodology of historical research. CEU Press: New York.
19Candida Yates. (2015). The Play of Political Culture, Emotion and Identity. Palgrave Macmillan: London.
20Robert A. Segal. (2012). Clifford Geertz’s Interpretive Approach to Religion. In: Religion Compass 6/12 (2012): pp. 511–524.
21Dvora Yanow and Peregrine Schwartz-Shea (eds.) 2006. Interpretation and Method Empirical Research Methods and the Interpretive Turn. M.E.Sharpe: Armonk, New York
22Ben White. (2007) Clifford Geertz: Singular Genius of Interpretive Anthropology. In: Development and Change 38(6), (2007), pp. 1187–1208
23Robert van Voren. (2009). On Dissidents and Madness. From The Soviet Union of Leonid Brezhnev to the “Soviet Union” of Vladimir Putin. Rodopi: New York.
24Robert Horvath. (2005.) The Legacy of Soviet Dissent. Dissidents, democratisation and radical nationalism in Russia. Routledge: London.
25Anandam Kavoori and Kalyani Chadha. (2009). The Cultural Turn in International Communication. In:Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media/June 2009, pp. 336-346.
26Sheila Fitzpatrick. (2000). Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. Oxford University Press: Oxford.
27Hanovs D., Gubenko I. (eds.). (2018) Memory – access denied? Political landscapes of memory and inclusion in contemporary Europe. Versions, tendencies and analytical novelties. Riga: Zinatne, 2018. – pp. 95-115
28Michael Haynes and Rumy Husan. (2003). A Century of State Murder? Death and Policy in Twentieth-Century Russia. Pluto Press: London.
Other Information Sources
1Journal of Cultural studies. Available from: https://journals.sagepub.com/home/ics v
2Journal of Political Culture. Available from: https://www.springer.com/journal/10767