In times of increasing challenges to ‘the Western idea,’ this book
illuminates how Russian and EU foreign policy discourses interact.
While official Russian and EU articulations on issues of sovereignty,
human rights and the shared neighbourhood diverge greatly, they are
not articulated in isolation but are entangled and condition each
other. To understand this entanglement, this book approaches the
relationship between Russia and the EU as an intersubjective one, a
social context where diverging interpretations of the world struggle
for hegemony. Its theoretical framework marries poststructuralist
thought with insights from critical approaches to Hegelian recognition
dialectics. Based on an extensive and systematic empirical discourse
analysis of Russian and EU foreign policy texts, this study draws a
detailed picture of the intensifying discursive dynamics accompanying
the deteriorating relationship between Brussels and Moscow. It shows
how neither the EU’s nor Russia’s foreign policy articulation has
changed substantially. The interaction pattern continues to be an
asymmetrical one with Russia’s articulations much more conditioned
by the EU’s discourse than vice versa. The book thus argues that the
EU is more independent in sovereignly articulating an interpretation
of the world, whereas Russia continues to face constraints in the
formulation of an autonomous political project. With its novel and
innovative conceptual framework, this book furthers the theoretical
scholarship on poststructuralism in international relations. It
addresses all scholars interested in poststructuralist enquiries and
will be of great value to students and scholars of Russian foreign
policy and the EU.
Les mer
Struggling for Recognition
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040404065
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter