Russian Culture, Property Rights, and the Market Economy
The Russian Federation is struggling, since Perestroika and the Glasnost, in a futile attempt to become a 'normal' member in the occidental family of market economies. The attempt largely fails because corporations do not live up to Western standards of behaviour, and private contracts are often not respected. What is the cause of Russia's observed difficulties? It is commonly believed that these difficulties are an expected outcome of a rocky transition from a Marxist, centrally planned system, to a market-based economy. This 2007 book challenges the accepted wisdom. In tracing the history of contract and the corporation in the West, it shows that the cultural infrastructure that gave rise to these patterns of economic behaviour have never taken root on Russian soil. The book's main thesis is supported by an in-depth comparison of Western and Russian theology, philosophy, literary and artistic achievements, musical and architectural idioms and folk culture.
- Includes 52 plates of works of art
- Truly multi-disciplinary - it is about law, economics, politics, art, literature, theology and music, to name just a few subjects
- Shows how all these aspects of Western and Russian life are tightly inter-connected
Reviews & endorsements
"Procaccia's book is a bold attempt to explain Russia's inability to develop an effective capitalist economy, arguing that Russian mentality is rooted in an iconic view of the world - one that denies human individuality and hence the possibility of contract. Procaccia sees 'Eternal Russia’ as trapped in a single mind-set which even Communism failed to dislodge."
Peter Rutland, Wesleyan University, Choice
Product details
May 2007Hardback
9780521835060
312 pages
229 × 152 × 21 mm
0.63kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Humanism
- 3. Individualism
- 4. Authority
- 5. Wealth
- 6. Truth
- 7. The icon and the word.