Publication: Contemporary Russia as a Feudal Society: A New Perspective of the Post-Soviet Era by Vladimir Shlapentokh, London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2007 (Book Review)
Issued Date
2022
Resource Type
Resource Version
Accepted Manuscript
Language
eng
File Type
application/pdf
ISSN
2697-3804 (online)
Journal Title
Journal of Human Rights and Peace Studies
Volume
8
Issue
1
Start Page
177
End Page
189
Access Rights
open access
Rights
ผลงานนี้เป็นลิขสิทธิ์ของมหาวิทยาลัยมหิดล ขอสงวนไว้สำหรับเพื่อการศึกษาเท่านั้น ต้องอ้างอิงแหล่งที่มา ห้ามดัดแปลงเนื้อหา และห้ามนำไปใช้เพื่อการค้า
Rights Holder(s)
Institute of Human Rights and Peace Studies Mahidol University
Center for Public Policy and Human Rights Studies Fakultas Hukum Universitas Lampung
Center for Public Policy and Human Rights Studies Fakultas Hukum Universitas Lampung
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Human Rights and Peace Studies. Vol.8, No.2 (Jul-Dec 2022), 177-189
Suggested Citation
Yanuar Sumarlan, James R. Rumpia Contemporary Russia as a Feudal Society: A New Perspective of the Post-Soviet Era by Vladimir Shlapentokh, London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2007 (Book Review). Journal of Human Rights and Peace Studies. Vol.8, No.2 (Jul-Dec 2022), 177-189. 189. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/110279
Research Projects
Organizational Units
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Thesis
Title
Contemporary Russia as a Feudal Society: A New Perspective of the Post-Soviet Era by Vladimir Shlapentokh, London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2007 (Book Review)
Author(s)
Abstract
What has happened in post-Soviet Russia that its leader behaves in such a violent manner lately? One of the glimpses that appear rather convincingly from the realm of the political-economic realm is Shlapentok’s Contemporary Russia as a Feudal Society: A New Perspective on the Post-Soviet Era. This book appeared almost immediately after the first signs of ‘re-feudalization’ of post-Soviet Russia popped up in 2006. Vladislav Surkov’s words that Russia is a “sovereign democracy” was refuted by Dmitrii Medvedev in June 2006. It offers a quantum leap beyond this 'little debate' by proving and concluding that post-Soviet Russia is an epitome of a "feudal model". The major features of feudal Europe were similar to those of post-Soviet Russia. The central administration must cooperate with powerful actors, including regional leaders, corporations, and wealthy individuals, as well as churches and other major social actors; in exchange for legitimacy—a commodity provided only by the central administration—various social actors supply the supreme leader with troops, money, and support in the election process . Vassal relations as the basis of feudalism go back to the works of March Bloch (1961) and other, who claimed that such relations are a direct consequence of the weakness of the central state and the dependence of the king on feudal lords and other "big actors". Elements of feudalism in Russia had appeared in the Kyiv State in the ninth century when the king was only seen as a senior among other warriors, told by Russian chroniclers in the twelfth century.