Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity

The paper deals with the formation of a new national identity in Belarus under conditions of post-Soviet transformation. Under the term of “national identity” the author means the identity of the population of the Republic of Belarus that will be adequate to its status of a newly independent state a...

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Main Author: Larissa Titarenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2011-11-01
Series:International Studies: Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/international/article/view/7042
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spelling doaj-975c592ef99b473c869695a0b65903f12021-09-02T05:09:07ZengLodz University PressInternational Studies: Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal2300-86952011-11-0113172110.2478/v10223-011-0002-47042Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National IdentityLarissa Titarenko0Department of Sociology, Belarus State UniversityThe paper deals with the formation of a new national identity in Belarus under conditions of post-Soviet transformation. Under the term of “national identity” the author means the identity of the population of the Republic of Belarus that will be adequate to its status of a newly independent state acquired after 1991. Special attention is paid to the existing major research approaches to the problem of constructing this national identity. According to the author’s view, both major approaches are inadequate; the author puts forward a new (third) approach that goes beyond discussions on language and national culture, and corresponds to the concept of plurality of identities. The author describes some paradoxes of national identity based on the opposition of “nation” and “people”. These correspond to the Western model of the “creation of modern nations”, which is not fully applicable to post-Soviet Belarus. All attempts to apply this model to contemporary Belarus lead scholars to several “cultural paradoxes” that can, however, be explained within a new approach.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/international/article/view/7042post-soviet belarusnational identitynationsystemic transformationpluralism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Larissa Titarenko
spellingShingle Larissa Titarenko
Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
International Studies: Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal
post-soviet belarus
national identity
nation
systemic transformation
pluralism
author_facet Larissa Titarenko
author_sort Larissa Titarenko
title Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
title_short Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
title_full Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
title_fullStr Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
title_full_unstemmed Post-Soviet Belarus: The Transformation of National Identity
title_sort post-soviet belarus: the transformation of national identity
publisher Lodz University Press
series International Studies: Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal
issn 2300-8695
publishDate 2011-11-01
description The paper deals with the formation of a new national identity in Belarus under conditions of post-Soviet transformation. Under the term of “national identity” the author means the identity of the population of the Republic of Belarus that will be adequate to its status of a newly independent state acquired after 1991. Special attention is paid to the existing major research approaches to the problem of constructing this national identity. According to the author’s view, both major approaches are inadequate; the author puts forward a new (third) approach that goes beyond discussions on language and national culture, and corresponds to the concept of plurality of identities. The author describes some paradoxes of national identity based on the opposition of “nation” and “people”. These correspond to the Western model of the “creation of modern nations”, which is not fully applicable to post-Soviet Belarus. All attempts to apply this model to contemporary Belarus lead scholars to several “cultural paradoxes” that can, however, be explained within a new approach.
topic post-soviet belarus
national identity
nation
systemic transformation
pluralism
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/international/article/view/7042
work_keys_str_mv AT larissatitarenko postsovietbelarusthetransformationofnationalidentity
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