Knowledge Base Glossary    Contact Us
Search  
   
Browse by Category
Knowledge Base .: Archives Fiction and Non-Fiction Reviews .: Horror .: Reviewer: N. Goldman .: Russia’s Empires: Their Rise and Fall: From Prehistory to Putin

Russia’s Empires: Their Rise and Fall: From Prehistory to Putin

Author: Philip Longworth

ISBN:  071956204X

Philip Longworth’s history of Russia and the Russians stretches from deep prehistory to the very present. One of the benefits of this approach is that it makes clear just to what extent the ability to recover land and convert it to productive use, particularly in agricultural terms, has been responsible for the patterns of human settlement and state development. Longworth takes as part of his thesis the rise (and possible fall) of the four great empires of the Russian people and, given the essential nature of empires, the attempts of their controllers to enforce the hegemony of the central state over peripheral areas and the people occupying those areas.

The early empires did this in physical and territorial terms, while the later ones, notably the communist empire, also attempted to enforce ideological hegemony not only within its own geographic space but also in satellite states around the world. The Russian empires fell and were interspersed with non-Russian controlled states, most notably by the Mongol hordes but also by other nomadic peoples. The creation of a Russian spirit and state in the modern age, therefore, has been a lengthy process interrupted by alien rule and by alien traditions.

The great figures in Russian history – Ivan the Terrible, Catherine the Great, Lenin inter alia – were concerned to create a unified state with a coherent underlying ideology which rejected that which it had just replaced. This narrative thrust propels the text which, at just over 400 pages, is neither too short to flirt with superficiality nor too long as to invite tedium. Indeed, the text is refreshingly well-written and stimulating and would act as a useful model for the writing of a complete history such as this.

Having provided this background of praise, which is wholeheartedly offered, it might also be observed that this does not mean I always agreed with what the author has to say. While I am prepared to concede that the religious institutions did provide a means of ensuring continuity and coherence while regimes were changing and represented oases of learning and knowledge in a wilderness of often willful ignorance, I am not convinced they were as important as Longworth argues nor as effective in resisting external influence.

He argues, for example, that the destruction of the Russian cities and governance infrastructure resulting from the Mongol domination was not great – although most other analyses differ from this. There will be others who will challenge his treatment of the fall of Communism and the reasons for it, although his approach seems reasonable and coherent. His parting words on Putin are also worthy of consideration in terms of understanding how he came to power as part of the need to continue creating ideology to underpin a strong state in a world in which only market-based institutions appear to be given any credence.

There are few single volume histories of Russia and the Russian people and it would be churlish to carp at such a sustained achievement as this. Any reader with an interest in one of the most important and often baffling countries of the world will benefit from reading this book.

The above review was contributed by: John Walsh PhD:  Professor at Shinawatra International University CLICK TO VIEW  John Walsh's Reviews 

Related Articles

article The Rise and Fall of the Empires
Author:Caroline CovellISBN: 1589821785The following book was contributed by: John Walsh: CLICK TO VIEW John Walsh's ReviewsIndonesia is a country of some 17,000 islands, most of which are uninhabited. Extending over a vast swathe of land, numerous states have emerged in the past, basing their wealth and power on the international trading networks that took the spices of the Moluccas and Sumatra to Japan and China in the east, India, Persia and the Mediterranean in the west. The largest and...

(No rating)  4-10-2006    Views: 3470   
article The Trials Of Lenny Bruce: The Fall And Rise Of An American Icon by Ronald K.L. Collins: David M. Skover
Comedian Lenny Bruce has always been something of an enigma. Some compared him to the famous satirist Jonathan Swift, who was a moralist and who endeavoured to uncover the hypocrisy of various situations arising out of society. His defence attorneys even pointed out “he was not a mad man writing dirty words on the walls of a public toilet. He was an original social critic with an unconventional vocabulary.” Others, however, including some well known journalists, perceived him as a “sick...

(No rating)  1-1-1970    Views: 4019   
article St. Petersburg Russia
If you are thinking of travel to St. Petersburg Russia, you may want to read Norm Goldman Editor of Sketchandtravel.com and Bookpleasures.com's interview with an expert on St. Petersburg, Russia.CLICK HERE to read the interview.

(No rating)  8-7-2006    Views: 4202   
article Russian Experiences: Life in the Former USSR and Post-Soviet Russia by The Raven and Marie Claire
Struggle for freedom Review by Denise M.Clark GUEST REVIEWER What is the difference between Communism and National Socialism? Can anyone outside the Soviet Union truly understand what it was like to live in Post World War II Russia? Can an outsider relate to the daily hardships of the Cold War period, or the early 1960's, with its aftermath of the erection of the Berlin Wall? What event or events precipitated the escalation of difficulties between 'Motherland Russia' and its...

(No rating)  1-1-1970    Views: 2440   
article When Shadows Fall
Click Here To Purchase When Shadows Fall Author: Kate FellowesISBN: 9781934041222 Publisher: Swimming Kangaroo Books After reading the book,

(No rating)  3-29-2008    Views: 2469   
article Winter Spring Summer Fall
Author: Ellen WeissPublisher: Brighter Minds Children’s PublishingISBN: 157791312-4            Everyone knows that small children have short attention spans. You have to work hard to get them to sit still even for a few minutes. Well, the truth is, you don’t work hard at all—you succeed or you don’t. If your toddler doesn’t want to sit and read with you, she won’t. The trick is to find a book that stimulates her senses. Each page has to reveal more than a cute picture for the youngest reader...

(No rating)  2-16-2007    Views: 3938   
article The Rose of York: Fall from Grace
Author: Sandra WorthPublisher: End Table BooksISBN:  9780975126493"Now is the winter of our discontentMade glorious summer by this sun of York."Richard III, I.1.1-2 For all the disservice done to Richard III by Shakespeare, his opening lines of Richard III could do no more to accurately divine the shift in thought that Sandra Worth's trilogy seeks to influence about the last Plantagenet king of England.   In "The Rose of York" trilogy (Love and War, Crown of D

(No rating)  4-18-2007    Views: 8767   

User Comments

No comments have been posted.


.: Powered by Lore 1.5.2