Author:
Lopatina Sofia,Kostenko Veronica,Ponarin Eduard
Abstract
A backlash against liberal gender and sexuality attitudes has been an issue in many societies, especially post-Communist. However, it takes a different shape in each socio–cultural context. This article contributes to academic debates about neo-traditionalism in the post-Soviet space and focuses specifically on Armenia. It points at some possible mechanisms that make these societies look more neo-traditionalist than they actually are. From the previous research of gender aspects of nationalism, we argue that the neo-traditionalist public discourses in Armenia might be a by-product of the national identity construction. We conclude that the individual-choice attitudes in the post-Soviet space may reflect the respondents' acceptance of a national ideology promoted by the post-Soviet elites rather than their private practices. Our aim is to reveal the complexities of neo-traditionalism in the post-Soviet space where everyday practices are at odds with neo-traditionalist narratives, which we argue might be a result of the Soviet legacy of unwritten rules and open secrets.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Public Administration,Safety Research,Sociology and Political Science
Reference80 articles.
1. The search for privacy and the return of a grand narrative: religion in a post-communist society;Agadjanian;Soc. Compass,2006
2. Double gendered: public views on women's and men's migration in Armenia;Agadjanian;J. Ethnic Migrat. Stud.,2020
3. AghajanianL.
Breaking the Grip of the Oligarchs. Foreign Policy 52012
4. AharonianL.
Nationalism and Sex. The Armenian Weekly 72010
5. Secondhand;Alexievich,2016