A new Narrative for “Russian History” I Book Talk in cooperation with ZMO, followed by a reception
The two-volume history course A New Imperial History of Northern Eurasia, 600–1918: From Russian to Global History published by Bloomsbury Academic represents a comprehensive response to the systemic crisis in the field traditionally identified as Russian history. Our history course broadens calls to decolonize, de-Russify, and decenter the field of “Russian history,” not by means of ideological censorship or by substituting Russocentric historical narratives with alternative national—and equally nationalist—narratives, and not even simply by supplementing familiar storylines with additional historical examples “from the margins.” A New Imperial History offers a principally new positive synthesis based on discarding the still prevalent nation-centered “scheme of Russian history” and the mode of national history as such. Its radically new analytical language and grand narrative systemically overhaul history that is traditionally rendered and currently rejected as “Russian.” By the same token, this history course explicates the still existing possibility of reviving the common academic field, currently trending in the direction of the atomization and self-demise of its extensive teaching infrastructure, ambitious publishing programs, and vast, diverse, and multilingual scholarly community.
Volume 1 covers the period 600–1700 CE, when the region's perception as a single geographical and social entity was forged through the interactions and conflicts of local self-organization projects. Volume 2 covers the period of 1700–1918, when the diverse spaces of Northern Eurasia became an arena of empire-building from above, and self-organization and competition within the Russian imperial formation from below.
Ilya Gerasimov (Candidate of Sciences in History, Kazan University and PhD in History, Rutgers University) is co-founder and the executive editor of Ab Imperio: Studies of New Imperial History and Nationalism in the Post-Soviet Space. He has published several books and edited volumes in the Russian Federation and the United States, including Plebeian Modernity: Social Practices, Illegality, and the Urban Poor in Russia, 1905–1917 (University of Rochester Press, 2018), Modernism and Public Reform in Late Imperial Russia: Rural Professionals and Self-Organization, 1905–30 (Palgrave, 2009), and Empire Speaks Out: Languages of Rationalization and Self-description in the Russian Empire (Brill, 2009).
Marina Mogilner is Professor and Edward and Marianna Thaden Chair in Russian and East European Intellectual History at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is a founding coeditor of Ab Imperio quarterly. Her most recent books include: Jews, Race, and the Politics of Difference. The Case of Vladimir Jabotinsky against the Russian Empire (Indiana University Press, 2023); A Race for the Future: Scientific Visions of Modern Russian Jewishness (Harvard University Press, 2022); edited volume A Cultural History of Race in the Age of Empire and Nation State (1760–1920), for the 6-volume Bloomsbury series “A Cultural History of Race” (Bloomsbury Academic, 2021); and Homo Imperii: A History of Physical Anthropology in Russia (University of Nebraska Press, 2013). Her current project explores the role of modern ethnography in enabling an “ethnographic state” in the late Russian Empire.
Zeit & Ort
12.06.2025 | 17:00 - 19:00
Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient, Kirchweg 33, 14129 Berlin