Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. — 219 p. — ISBN: 9781137409294.
The main point this book makes is rather straightforward: I argue that Russia must be viewed as a subaltern empire. This idea is not completely new, but its implications are strangely overlooked in the literature or, rather, in many literatures for which this point is of some considerable significance. The aspect that does not get enough attention is of course not the imperial one Russian imperialism has been studied from many perspectives, including those which are considered in this book. It is the subaltern side of Russia’s condition that in my view is not properly reflected upon. This is the reason, and the only reason, why this book stresses the subaltern part of the formula. I believe that both are equally important, and most of the time, I try to demonstrate that they are mutually constitutive. However, it is only the subaltern side that I analyse in detail, outsourcing the examination of the imperial element to the existing literature and the reader’s prior knowledge.