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TWO CIVILIZATIONS : THE RELATIONS OF RUSSIA AND WESTERN EUROPE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 21st CENTURY. / Gutorov, V. A.; Shirinyants, A. A.; Shutov, A. Yu.

In: Baltic Region, Vol. 10, No. 4, 2018, p. 132-141.

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Gutorov, V. A. ; Shirinyants, A. A. ; Shutov, A. Yu. / TWO CIVILIZATIONS : THE RELATIONS OF RUSSIA AND WESTERN EUROPE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 21st CENTURY. In: Baltic Region. 2018 ; Vol. 10, No. 4. pp. 132-141.

BibTeX

@article{5ab4ec2d9d9c4935af24a618ad4d60e1,
title = "TWO CIVILIZATIONS: THE RELATIONS OF RUSSIA AND WESTERN EUROPE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 21st CENTURY",
abstract = "The challenges of building relations between two different civilizations, which Samuel Huntington and Lev Gumilev wrote about, are currently becoming more obvious due to the cardinal geopolitical and geoeconomic changes that have taken place since the demise the USSR and the world socialist system. Today, in the West, as if in contrast to the famous project by Charles de Gaulle {"}Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals{"}, an extremely negative image of Russia is being formed. Western ideologists stick to the axiom according to which despotism and slavery, allegedly being the basis of Russia's internal order, inevitably give rise to aggression in relations with the outside world. Of course, these ideas do not take into account the ongoing socio-economic changes in the country and have little to do with modern realities. They are a mere reproduction of the old Western xenophobic moods going back to the time when Russophobia was widely spread in a number of leading European countries. The article explores historical roots of Russophobia and their manifesttations at the beginning of the XXI century in Poland and the Baltic countries.",
keywords = "inter-civilization splits, Russophobia, geopolitics, peaceful coexistence, the Bal¬tic region, inter-civilization splits, Russophobia, geopolitics, peaceful coexistence, the Bal¬tic region",
author = "Gutorov, {V. A.} and Shirinyants, {A. A.} and Shutov, {A. Yu}",
note = "Gutorov, V. A., Shirinyants, A. A., Shutov, A. Yu. 2018, Two civilizations: the relations of Russia and Western Europe at the beginning of the 21st century, Baltic Region, Vol. 10, no. 4, p. 132—141. doi: 10.5922/2079-8555-2018-4-9.",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.5922/2079-8555-2018-4-9",
language = "Английский",
volume = "10",
pages = "132--141",
journal = "Baltic Region",
issn = "2079-8555",
publisher = "Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - TWO CIVILIZATIONS

T2 - THE RELATIONS OF RUSSIA AND WESTERN EUROPE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE 21st CENTURY

AU - Gutorov, V. A.

AU - Shirinyants, A. A.

AU - Shutov, A. Yu

N1 - Gutorov, V. A., Shirinyants, A. A., Shutov, A. Yu. 2018, Two civilizations: the relations of Russia and Western Europe at the beginning of the 21st century, Baltic Region, Vol. 10, no. 4, p. 132—141. doi: 10.5922/2079-8555-2018-4-9.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - The challenges of building relations between two different civilizations, which Samuel Huntington and Lev Gumilev wrote about, are currently becoming more obvious due to the cardinal geopolitical and geoeconomic changes that have taken place since the demise the USSR and the world socialist system. Today, in the West, as if in contrast to the famous project by Charles de Gaulle "Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals", an extremely negative image of Russia is being formed. Western ideologists stick to the axiom according to which despotism and slavery, allegedly being the basis of Russia's internal order, inevitably give rise to aggression in relations with the outside world. Of course, these ideas do not take into account the ongoing socio-economic changes in the country and have little to do with modern realities. They are a mere reproduction of the old Western xenophobic moods going back to the time when Russophobia was widely spread in a number of leading European countries. The article explores historical roots of Russophobia and their manifesttations at the beginning of the XXI century in Poland and the Baltic countries.

AB - The challenges of building relations between two different civilizations, which Samuel Huntington and Lev Gumilev wrote about, are currently becoming more obvious due to the cardinal geopolitical and geoeconomic changes that have taken place since the demise the USSR and the world socialist system. Today, in the West, as if in contrast to the famous project by Charles de Gaulle "Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals", an extremely negative image of Russia is being formed. Western ideologists stick to the axiom according to which despotism and slavery, allegedly being the basis of Russia's internal order, inevitably give rise to aggression in relations with the outside world. Of course, these ideas do not take into account the ongoing socio-economic changes in the country and have little to do with modern realities. They are a mere reproduction of the old Western xenophobic moods going back to the time when Russophobia was widely spread in a number of leading European countries. The article explores historical roots of Russophobia and their manifesttations at the beginning of the XXI century in Poland and the Baltic countries.

KW - inter-civilization splits, Russophobia, geopolitics, peaceful coexistence, the Bal¬tic region

KW - inter-civilization splits, Russophobia, geopolitics, peaceful coexistence, the Bal¬tic region

UR - https://journals.kantiana.ru/upload/iblock/53b/9-Gutorov_132-141.pdf

U2 - 10.5922/2079-8555-2018-4-9

DO - 10.5922/2079-8555-2018-4-9

M3 - статья

VL - 10

SP - 132

EP - 141

JO - Baltic Region

JF - Baltic Region

SN - 2079-8555

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 37937618