Who Built Nations in Eurasia? How Writers, Artists, and Professors Shaped Beliefs about National Identity (doi:10.7910/DVN/4W5KE3)

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Document Description

Citation

Title:

Who Built Nations in Eurasia? How Writers, Artists, and Professors Shaped Beliefs about National Identity

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/4W5KE3

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Date of Distribution:

2022-06-14

Version:

1

Bibliographic Citation:

Reichert, Matthew, 2027, "Who Built Nations in Eurasia? How Writers, Artists, and Professors Shaped Beliefs about National Identity", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/4W5KE3, Harvard Dataverse, V1

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Who Built Nations in Eurasia? How Writers, Artists, and Professors Shaped Beliefs about National Identity

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/4W5KE3

Authoring Entity:

Reichert, Matthew (Harvard Department of Government)

Producer:

Reichert, Matthew

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Distributor:

Department of Government

Access Authority:

Reichert, Matthew

Depositor:

Reichert, Matthew

Date of Deposit:

2022-05-10

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/4W5KE3

Study Scope

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Social Sciences, nationality, nationalism, national identity, Soviet Union, Eurasia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, state-building, authoritarianism

Topic Classification:

Harvard University, Department of Government

Abstract:

How can we explain the diversity of ways that nationality has been imagined in multi-national states? Why do some national groups remain loyal to multi-nationalism, while others reject it? When is nationality meaningful to begin with? <br> <br> This project provides such a theory to explain variation in national beliefs in the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was the first multinational state in that it systematically inculcated national identity amongst its citizens by investing in native-language education and building indigenous cultural intelligentsias under a single, sovereign, socialist roof. My theory tells us how Soviet nation-building did in fact shape the way that everyday Soviet citizens thought about national identity. <br> <br> I distinguish between two distinct dimensions of nationality: the political implications of nationality for the state, and the meaningfulness of nationality to begin with. To explain the former dimension, I point to the writers, artists, and professors that let nationalist movements during the collapse of communism. Members of these national intelligentsia, like the poet Silva Kaputikyan in Armenia, the writer Zviad Gamsakhurdia in Georgia, and the musicologist Vytautas Landsbergis in Lithuania had long histories of advocating over communal grievances in the offices of writers unions and hallways of national academies. When Mikhail Gorbachev’s liberalizing policies lifted the constraints of Soviet censorship, it was these communal grievances that became the seeds of popular movements that would eventually challenge Soviet multinationalism. <br> <br> I do not suggest, however, that structure did not matter. Rather, the legacy of mass native-language literacy continued to shape which categories of nationality were already meaningful to everyday Soviet citizens. In this way, mass native-language literacy would empower or constrain the ability of national intelligentsias to popularize their communal grievances. Intelligentsia seeking to popularize communal grievances made appeals based on imagined membership in the nation, and such claims only rang true when these nations were already clearly defined and easily understood – when it was unquestionable that they existed in the first place. In this way, the long-term influence of mass literacy and the proximate effect of intelligentsias - structure and agency - together explain the full diversity of ways that nationality was imagined in Eurasia in this period. <br> <br> These files contain the data necessary to replicate the quantitative analyses from Chapters 4, 6, and 7 of this project. They include published event data from Beissinger (2002) on nationalist mobilization in the Soviet Union in 1987-91, original archival data on voting in 1946, original archival data on the Soviet literacy campaigns form 1920 to 1951, census data, and 1989 electoral data from digitized primary sources. Please contact the author with specific questions.

Country:

Russian Federation

Geographic Coverage:

enter area covered here

Unit of Analysis:

Varied

Kind of Data:

historical and archival data

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Notes:

This study was deposited under the of the Data-PASS standard deposit terms. A copy of the usage agreement is included in the file section of this study.

Data Access

Restrictions:

The data archived in the Harvard Government Dissertation Dataverse are <b>embargoed for use for up to five years<b/> from the deposit date.

Citation Requirement:

I will include a bibliographic citation acknowledging the use of these data in any publication or presentation in which these data are used. Such citations will appear in footnotes or in the reference section of any such manuscript.

Notes:

This dataset is made available under a Creative Commons CC0 license with the following additional/modified terms and conditions:

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Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Chapter4_Data1.csv

Notes:

text/csv

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Chapter4_Data2.csv

Notes:

text/csv

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Chapter6_Data.csv

Notes:

text/csv

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Label:

Chapter7_Data.csv

Notes:

text/csv

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

DataDictionary.xlsx

Notes:

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet