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What is to be done? Marx and Mackinder in Minsk
by
Klinke, Ian
in
Accounting
/ Belarus
/ Capitalism
/ Conflict
/ Cooperation
/ Discourse
/ Dying
/ Empires
/ Europe
/ Geopolitics
/ Marxism
/ Narratives
/ Political leaders
/ Presidents
/ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
2013
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Do you wish to request the book?
What is to be done? Marx and Mackinder in Minsk
by
Klinke, Ian
in
Accounting
/ Belarus
/ Capitalism
/ Conflict
/ Cooperation
/ Discourse
/ Dying
/ Empires
/ Europe
/ Geopolitics
/ Marxism
/ Narratives
/ Political leaders
/ Presidents
/ Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
2013
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Journal Article
What is to be done? Marx and Mackinder in Minsk
2013
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Overview
This article is prompted by recent calls for a 'Marxist geopolitics'. By exploring the case of contemporary Belarus, it argues that a Marxist geopolitics already (or rather still) exists in the world beyond the academic ivory tower. A dissection of foreign political discourse surrounding President Alexander Lukashenka over the last decade exposes two narratives that draw extensively from the repertoire of Soviet geopolitics. Whilst the first Marxist–Leninist storyline revives the early USSR's geopolitical position as a young state in the midst of a dystopian Western capitalism, the second one is familiar from the dying days of the Soviet empire and tells the story of a state that lies at the centre of a Utopian common European house. The conclusion assesses the neo-Marxist concept of the 'anti-geopolitical', but finds it to have difficulties in accounting for the struggle of the Belarusian opposition.
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