skip navigation

Political Religions

Aleksandr Dugin's Neo-Eurasianism: The New Right à la Russe

By Anton Shekhovtsov, Sevastopol National Technical University (June 2009)


Section: Political Religions

Subject: Religion.

Place: Europe.

Key Topics: race, doctrine, democracy, modernity, political theory, ideology, globalization, multiculturalism.

Abstract

Russian political thinker and, by his own words, geopolitician, Aleksandr Dugin, represents a comparatively new trend in the radical Russian nationalist thought. In the course of the 1990s, he introduced his own doctrine that was called Neo-Eurasianism. Despite the supposed reference to the interwar political movement of Eurasianists, Dugin's Neo-Eurasian nationalism was rooted in the political and cultural philosophy of the European New Right. Neo-Eurasianism is based on a quasi-geopolitical theory that juxtaposes the ‘Atlanticist New World Order’ (principally the US and the UK) against the Russia-oriented ‘New Eurasian Order’. According to Dugin, the ‘Atlanticist Order’ is a homogenizing force that dilutes national and cultural diversity that is a core value for Eurasia. Taken for granted, Eurasia is perceived to suffer from a ‘severe ethnic, biological and spiritual’ crisis and is to undergo an ‘organic cultural-ethnic process’ under the leadership of Russia that will secure the preservation of Eurasian nations and their cultural traditions. Neo-Eurasianism, sacralized by Dugin and his followers in the form of a political religion, provides a clear break from narrow nationalism toward the New Right ethopluralist model. Many Neo-Eurasian themes find a broad response among Russian high-ranking politicians, philosophers, scores of university students, as well as numerous avant-garde artists and musicians. Already by the end of the 1990s, Neo-Eurasianism took on a respectable, academic guise and was drawn in to ‘scientifically’ support some anti-American and anti-British rhetoric of the Russian government.

DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2009.00158.x

This article abstract has been viewed 1101 times.

view cite Add to my Compass

Add to VLE/CMS feedback


Top 5 related articles

Top 5 Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Quick Search

Related Blackwell Reference Chapters

Religion Compass - Personal Subscription Rates

Indexed by:

Atlas company logo
Religious Exchange Forum banner
 
[ access key 0 : accessibility information including access key list ] [ access key 1 : home page ] [ access key 2 : skip navigation] [ access key 6 : help ]