‘With this book, Mikhail Suslov joins the swollen ranks of Russia-watchers who for nearly two decades have endeavoured to identify and describe that most slippery of subjects, namely Putinism as an ideology. Suslov however takes a novel approach. Avoiding an overly exclusive focus on the persona of Putin himself, the author rather directs his attention to a number of more general contemporary perspectives in Russia—conservatism, nationalism, geopolitics, and religion—and shows how a Putinist ideology takes shape through its complex intersections with each of these. A historian of ideas rather than a political scientist, Suslov brings an unusual skill-set to his analysis, and he offers a series of compelling insights into the contemporary relevance of debates about Russian politics and identity that date back to the nineteenth century. Putinism: Post-Soviet Russian Regime Ideology is not only a work of impressive erudition and originality: it is precisely what is needed today to help us more fully comprehend the destructive ideological energies that drive Putin’s politics, both within Russia and beyond.’ - Mark Bassin, Research Professor, Södertörn University, Sweden and Research Director, Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Uppsala University, Sweden
‘Putinism – Post-Soviet Russian Regime Ideology offers the first comprehensive assessment of Putinism as an ideology. In this long-awaited analysis, Mikhail Suslov proposes a nuanced and in-depth exploration of the different conceptual, historical and institutional layers that constitutive Putinist ideology that brings precious insights to both scholars and policy experts.’ - Marlene Laruelle, Director, Illiberalism Studies Program and Director, Russia Program, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA
‘Suslov's monograph will become the standard work on the emerging ideology of Putinism. The book is a brilliant exposition of the different strands of political thought that have contributed to contemporary Putinism. Suslov's deep scholarship makes a convincing case that Putinism is a genuine ideology, which might even outlive Putin himself.’ - David Lewis, Professor of Politics, University of Exeter, UK
List of Figures
List of Tables
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction: Understanding Putinism
Studying Putinism as an ideology
What Is Putinism’s Ideological Identity?
What Is the Meaning of Putinism?
Is there popular demand for Putinism?
Chapter 2. Political Thinkers of the Past in the Service of Putinism
Slavophiles
Anti-mimetism in the teaching of Slavophiles
Populism in the ideology of Slavophiles
Ivan Il’in in Contemporary Russian Regime Ideology
Il’in in ideological debates today
Il’in’s worldview and the regime ideology
Aleksandr Zinov’ev
Zinov’ev’s social theory
Anti-Westernism and the “philosophy of war”
Chapter 3. Conservatism: Brief Engagement and Transformation of the Doctrine
Debates on ideology in post-Soviet Russia
Conservative ideology in the 1990s
Merging academic studies of conservatism and politics
URP and the Regime Ideology in the 2000s
Turn away from Conservatism: After 2011/12
Chapter 4. Ideological Forms of National Iterations
Russian nationalism or nationalistic discourses?
Civilisationism
Ideology of the Russian World
Diaspora as a political problem: Dealing with “Compatriots”
Conceptualisation of diaspora before 2014: The Russian World project
Russian World after 2014
Pan-Slavism
Chapter 5. Geopolitical ideologies
Greater Eurasia: Large and Central
“Large space” thinking and Eurasian projects
Greater Eurasia: Re-centering Russia
Isolationism in geo-political thinking
Geopolitical justice
Chapter 6. Religious aspects of Putinism
Ideology of the Russian Orthodox Church
The theory of “basic values”
Justice and Orthodoxy
Geopolitical dimension of the “basic values”
Historical unity and the ROC
Russia – My History exhibition
Messianism
Low-cost messianism in Putin’s Russia
Discussions on messianism: 1990s – mid-2000s
Messianism: Expansionist to isolationist
Mainstream messianic politics: mid-2000s to the present
Conclusion
Index
Mikhail Suslov is an Associate Professor in the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark