Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 27 – Given debates over whether Moscow should promote “non-ethnic
Russian” (rossiisky) as the chief
identity of the population of the Russian Federation or stress the
multi-national character of the population by talking about “ethnic Russians” (russkiye) and others, one might have
expected Moscow media would carefully distinguish between the two.
In
fact, based on the examination of 410 media texts during the first seven months
of this year, sociologist Olga Solodovnikova of the Stol.kom Analytic Center
says she found that the media treat the two terms as synonyms, a pattern that
she told a roundtable this week that she did not expect (ej.ru/?a=note&id=33056).
What that suggests, of course, is
that the distinction which is so important to Russian nationalists and
non-Russians as a whole is much less important for the powers that be, a
finding which means that Moscow can move between them more easily than many had
thought downgrading the ethnic component of identity of both Russians and
non-Russians.
Solodovnikova said she and her colleagues
also found that the Moscow media today make almost no distinction between “Russian”
even in the ethnic sense and “Soviet” which is definitely not an ethnic term. When
the media use either, however, they almost always consider the identity in
terms of its link to the state.
She conceded that the investigation “had
given rise to more questions than answers” because the terms involved are in
motion and constantly gaining new connotations and losing old ones. Five of the
experts taking part in the round table agreed with that assessment.
Ethno-sociologist Emil Pain
suggested that the study showed that the Russian population was now “pregnant”
with a civic nation, but philosopher Grigory Yudin said he was not so
sure. There are no clear definitions and
consequently no clear distinctions that allow for any such conclusion.
Georgy Kochetkov, an Orthodox priest,
said that in his view there is as yet no agreed upon collective term for the
identities of the population. One may yet emerge, but it is far from clear just
which one it will be and what that will mean for the various groups in the
population or for the state.
Olga Vendina, a professor at the
Higher School of Economics, cautioned against making sharp distinctions,
something she says that often happens when one talks about identity. And journalist Mitya Aleshkovsky suggested
that research on this issue would be strengthened by including Russian nationalist
sites which have their own point of view on this.
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