ABSTRACT

This book makes an original contribution to Russia-EU literature by analyzing constructions and trans-formations of the Russian ‘Self’ in relation to the European "Other". It provides an orientation towards understanding Russian foreign policy discourse under Putin and offers a thorough analysis of the actions of key policy actors to ground the Russian discourse ideationally, historically, psychologically, and politico-sociologically. Providing a rich analysis of how Russian foreign policy toward the EU evolved from cooperation to competition and ultimately conflict, the author argues that to understand these changes and continuities we must explore concepts of sovereignty and balance of power central to the drafting of Russian foreign policy. Primarily situated in the fields of International Relations and Russian foreign policy, this book will also be of interest to scholars in the fields of Foreign Policy Analysis, Post-Soviet Studies, Eurasian Studies, Historical International Relations, Critical Security Studies, Political Sociology, and Political Psychology.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

Foreign policy and politics of identity

part I|63 pages

Shadows of the past

chapter 2|32 pages

Overtones

chapter 3|29 pages

Undertones

part II|51 pages

History of the present

chapter 4|28 pages

Subjective structure

chapter 5|21 pages

Global impacts

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion