Saturday, March 16, 2019
Russias Fight for Identity Essay -- Geopolitics, History
In 1829, Petr Chaadeav began to write his Philosophical letters. He initiated Russias search for national identity. He was a major figure in the development of Russian intellectual  narration. The impact of the letter shook and changed the  idea of Russia. It argued that Russia was worthless and socially behind. Chaadeav was very harsh in his letter and appears to be bias. He made valid points but they  be not  only if true. The evidence shows that Russia was indeed a bit imitative but they were not the only country in search for national identity. Though Chaadeavs letter was very harsh, it gave Russia a sense of originality. Russia established their identity and is  gilded by their culture. Russias literature and art was big contribution to the  foundings  gain though they were seen to be unoriginal. Petr Chaadeav summarized his nations history as a brutal barbarism to begin with, followed by an  time of gross superstition, then by a ferocious and humiliating  unknown domination.  H   e continued by sayong we are al wiz in the world, we have given nothing to the world, we have taught it nothing. We have not added a  genius idea to the sum total of human ideas we have not contributed to the progress of the human spirit.  The Letter electrified Russian creativity Many called Chaadeav insane, but he was very intellectual. Chaadeavs statement about law codes No one has a fixed sphere of existence there are no proper habits, no rules that govern anything   insisted that Russias law codes were non-existent. This is not  but true. As stated in the previous paragraphs, the Table of Ranks is a  apex example implemented by Peter the Great. Laws made by Catherine and the Russkaia Pravda  are also great examples of law...  ... country in history is truly original.  every(prenominal) country has taken ideas from another.  Whether its religion, law codes, slaves, etc.no idea truly belongs to on country. works CitedKaiser, Daniel H., and Gary Marker. Reinterpreting Russian hist   ory readings, 860-1860s. New York Oxford University Press, 1994. Print. (tags none  edit tags)Kaiser, Daniel H., and Gary Marker. Society The Lowere and  reasonably Estates. Reinterpreting Russian history readings, 860-1860s. New York Oxford University Press, 1994. 295. Print. (tags none  edit tags)Polnoe sobranie sochinenii i izbrannye pisma,. Russian Intellectual History An Anthology.. Moscow Nathaniel Knight , 1991. 90, 92-93. Print. (tags none  edit tags)Turgenev, Ivan Sergeevich. Sketches from a hunters album. Complete ed. London, England Penguin Books, 1990. Print. (tags none  edit tags)                  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment