Generational and Geographic Effects on Collective Memory of the USSR

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
R. Mohr, K. Brown
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This study examines memory of the Soviet Union and political opinions in modern Russia through qualitative, semi-structured interviews across generations in two Russian cities. The study aims to explore the differences in memory and meaning of the Soviet Union across generation and geography, and to connect those differences to political dispositions in modern Russia. Respondents were asked about their impressions of the Soviet Union and modern-day Russia, and responses were coded for emergent themes and trends. The research finds that youth bifurcate along geographic lines; respondents in St. Petersburg were more likely to reject Soviet ideals than their counterparts in Yoshkar-Ola. The former also tended to prefer liberalism and globalization, while the latter expressed greater nationalism. Older respondents showed no distinct geographic trend, but gave more nuanced assessments of the Soviet Union due to the power of personal memory over cultural reconstruction. In younger respondents, these findings indicate that living in a cosmopolitan metropolis may condition interpretations of the Soviet past and influence contemporary political identity toward globalization. Youths living in smaller cities have less interaction with other global cities and therefore may have more conservative perceptions of the Soviet Union and Russia.
代际和地理对苏联集体记忆的影响
本研究通过在两个俄罗斯城市进行的跨代定性、半结构化访谈,考察了现代俄罗斯对苏联的记忆和政治观点。这项研究旨在探索不同时代和地域对苏联的记忆和意义的差异,并将这些差异与现代俄罗斯的政治倾向联系起来。受访者被问及他们对苏联和现代俄罗斯的印象,他们的回答被编码为新兴主题和趋势。研究发现,青年群体在地理上存在分化;圣彼得堡的受访者比尤什卡-奥拉的受访者更有可能拒绝苏联的理想。前者也倾向于自由主义和全球化,而后者则表现出更大的民族主义。年龄较大的受访者没有表现出明显的地理趋势,但由于个人记忆对文化重建的影响,他们对苏联的评价更加细致入微。在年轻的受访者中,这些发现表明,生活在一个国际化的大都市可能会限制对苏联过去的解释,并影响当代对全球化的政治认同。生活在小城市的年轻人与其他全球城市的互动较少,因此可能对苏联和俄罗斯有更保守的看法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Communist and Post-Communist Studies is an international journal covering all communist and post-communist states and communist movements, including both their domestic policies and their international relations. It is focused on the analysis of historical as well as current developments in the communist and post-communist world, including ideology, economy and society. It also aims to provide comparative foci on a given subject by inviting comments of a comparative character from scholars specializing in the same subject matter but in different countries.
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