Finno-Ugric Population of Northern Russia: The View of a Russian Ethnographer (Based on S. V. Maksimov's A Year in the North)

Nineteenth century Russian "mass" essays on ethnography produced a new language, combining scientific narrative and entertaining presentation. Maksimov’s A Year in the North became one of the first examples of this new style of ethnography. Maksimov creates images of the indigenous populat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nataliya Borisovna Gramatchikova
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Russian
Published: Ural Federal University Press 2015
Subjects:
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Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/12a82374c5a046a58c318ed8732b2c52
Description
Summary:Nineteenth century Russian "mass" essays on ethnography produced a new language, combining scientific narrative and entertaining presentation. Maksimov’s A Year in the North became one of the first examples of this new style of ethnography. Maksimov creates images of the indigenous population of northern Russia (Samoyeds, Sami, Karelians, Komi-Zyryans) revealing a leading colonial discourse and "evolutionary ladder" of people. The major steps of this "evolutionary ladder" are the first and last ones (i.e. those of Samoyeds and Zyryans). The author maintains that the artistry of this text does not distort the ethnographic discourse but, on the contrary, enriches it and serves as a "counterweight" to the author's concept.