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Russianism, Russism, or Russicism is an influence of Russian language on other languages.
Their very raison d'être was undermined by the extension of 'Russianism'.
Communism from the beginning in the Soviet Union was grafted onto Russianism.
Russianism, Russism, or Russicism is an influence of Russian language on other languages.
Aksákov's house, a stronghold of pure Russianism in Moscow society, became the temple of the cult of Gógol, and Aksákov its high priest."
An earlier work, "Soviet Politics: The Dilemma of Power" (Harvard, 1950), helped "sort out communism from Russianism," as The Times's reviewer Edward Crankshaw put it.
In countries that have long been under the influence of Russian Empire, Soviet Union, and modern Russia, Russianism is a direct result of "russification", when native words and expressions were replaced with Russian ones.
Russism may refer to one of the following:
Russianism, Russism, or Russicism is an influence of Russian language on other languages.
Ivanov-Sukharevsky has developed his own ideology which he calls Russism, which emphasises the centrality of race above all divisions.
The NNP ideology is based on the ideas of 'Russism', a creation of Ivanov-Sukharevsky.
Mansvetova E.N. On the problem of semantic differentiation of Slavisms and Russism // Research on semantics.
Russism is attractive to racists who adhere to Paganism rather than the Russian Orthodox Church, which is generally afforded a central role on the Russian extreme right.
However, although Russism avowedly links itself to Russian Orthodoxy, in practice the NNP has also been open to those elements of Neopaganism favoured by many of its skinhead followers.
Russism seeks to build a link from pre-revolutionary orthodox monarchism to Nazism, and identifies the two great heroes of the Twentieth century as Nicholas II of Russia and Adolf Hitler, arguing that Hitler was revenge on the Bolsheviks for the revolution.
It seeks to link earlier ideas of Russian Orthodox monarchism to Nazism, with Nicholas II of Russia and Adolf Hitler the two great heroes of Russism as, they claim, Hitler sought to revenge the Tsar for his killing by Jewish Bolsheviks.
Ivanov-Sukharevsky was largely supportive of Vladimir Putin when he was first elected as President of Russia, describing him as an 'indispensable and extremely important politician' and the 'hyper-link between Marxism and Russism', although adding that 'his ideology reflects the past stage of history'.