专制、民族、进步:城市空间与19世纪30年代的俄罗斯社会调查

IF 0.2 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Alexander M. Martin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

19世纪20年代和19世纪30年代开始了对城市生活的现代社会科学研究。在英国和法国,这些年引发了“狄更斯式”的焦虑,认为城市是肮脏、疾病肆虐的贫民窟。本文考察了俄罗斯城市社会研究的四位先驱——瓦西里·安德罗索夫、亚历山大·巴舒特斯基、塞门·盖夫斯基和安德烈·扎布罗茨基——在这些年里是如何代表圣彼得堡和莫斯科的物理空间的。他们借鉴了西方同时代人的思想和方法,特别是亚历山大·冯·洪堡和法国卫生学家路易斯·勒内·维勒梅,在三个空间尺度上描绘了俄罗斯的首都:单个房屋或街道、整个城市和整个地球。他们拒绝了西方同行的悲观主义,将圣彼得堡和莫斯科描绘成由明智的政府管理、由善良的人口居住的健康城市。然而,他们也认为,推动这两座城市发展的力量在一定程度上独立于帝国国家,只有经过培训的专家才能理解。因此,他们促成了对俄罗斯社会进行批判性讨论的公众舆论的兴起,并支持了尼古拉一世的官方国籍民族主义意识形态和他的政府在社会经济现代化方面的谨慎努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Autocracy, Nationality, Progress: Urban Space and Russian Social Investigations of the 1830s
The 1820s and 1830s saw the beginnings of the modern social-scientific study of urban life. In Great Britain and France, these years gave rise to the “Dickensian” anxiety about cities as squalid, disease-infested slums. This article examines how the physical space of St. Petersburg and Moscow was represented during these years by four pioneers of the study of Russian urban society – Vasilii Androssov, Aleksandr Bashutskii, Semen Gaevskii, and Andrei Zablotskii-Desiatovskii. Drawing on ideas and methodologies of Western contemporaries, especially Alexander von Humboldt and the French hygienist Louis-René Villermé, they depicted Russia’s capitals on three spatial scales: that of the individual house or street, the city as a whole, and the entire planet. Rejecting the pessimism of their Western counterparts, they depicted St. Petersburg and Moscow as wholesome cities managed by a wise government and inhabited by a benign population. However, they also argued that the forces driving the development of both cities were partly independent of the imperial state and could only be understood by trained experts. They thereby contributed to the rise of a public opinion engaged in critical discussion about Russian society, and bolstered both Nicholas I’s nationalist ideology of Official Nationality and his government’s cautious efforts at socioeconomic modernization.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
50.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Russian History’s mission is the publication of original articles on the history of Russia through the centuries, in the assumption that all past experiences are inter-related. Russian History seeks to discover, analyze, and understand the most interesting experiences and relationships and elucidate their causes and consequences. Contributors to the journal take their stand from different perspectives: intellectual, economic and military history, domestic, social and class relations, relations with non-Russian peoples, nutrition and health, all possible events that had an influence on Russia. Russian History is the international platform for the presentation of such findings.
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