
Contents
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The Roots of Self-Hatred The Roots of Self-Hatred
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Tethered to the Post Tethered to the Post
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The Virtues of a Weak Theory The Virtues of a Weak Theory
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The Cast of Characters The Cast of Characters
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The Fandom Menace The Fandom Menace
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Introduction: Postsocialism and the Legacy of Shame
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Published:June 2023
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Abstract
This introductory chapter provides an overview of how the collapse of the Soviet Union left its former constituent republics with multiple identity crises. In its last years, the USSR was losing its very reason for being (communist ideology); what did it mean to build a new country on the Union's ruins? As the legal successor to the Soviet Union, the newly constituted Russian Federation did not have the luxury of casting the USSR as an occupying force that had finally been cast out. Instead, the Soviet legacy was a source of both pride and shame. The emerging discourses of Russianness spent the first three Soviet decades oscillating between a rhetoric of inferiority and an aggressive response verging on self-aggrandizement. In response to the profound sense of displacement associated with the Soviet collapse, identities are continually contested and renegotiated, whether on the level of state television and media, speculative fiction about Russia's history and its missed alternatives, online communities, or urban folklore. This book examines these identities, from their roots in shame and self-hatred to their occasional assimilation into narratives of national pride.
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