Paul Goble
Staunton, Sept. 16 – Timur Atnashev, a specialist on intellectual history at the Higher School of Economics, says that Russians overwhelmingly have an inadequate mental map of their country, one that divides Moscow from the rest of the country rather than recognizing the enormous diversity that exists in Russia.
This mental map, he continues, informs much of the intellectual work of scholars in Russia and has spread from them to the powers and the population, thereby ensuring that “we do not know the country in which we live and work” (liberal.ru/trends/pochemu-my-ne-znaem-strany-v-kotoroj-zhivyom-i-trudimsya).
Atnashev says that public and even intellectual discourse all too often remains within a single schema: “the liberal-creative minority of Muscovites and the worker-peasant deep majority of people who live beyond the ring road.”
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