Abstract

ABSTRACTDrawing on the mathematical concept of recursion as the repeated application of a single function to an initial element in a succession capable of indefinite extension, the article develops a recursive nationhood framework to capture the ongoing, mutual production of nationhood by the transnational, and nation by nation, in an extendable series of self-renewing repetitions which mirror and transform one another. Arguing that the framework has particular resonance for post-Soviet Russia, it explores one instance of recursive nationhood: the 2015 television serial, Londongrad, broadcast by Russia’s STS channel. It analyses how, in the serial, transculturally generated images of Englishness, Russianness and Russian émigré-ness are recursively reprocessed and re-projected through one another in a self-conscious but circular hall-of-mirrors effect. The article concludes by linking recursive nationhood in Londongrad to a post-Soviet version of stiob, the peculiarly Russian form of self-parodic discourse which arose at the end of the Soviet period.

Highlights

  • This article forms an early part of a larger project that will apply a conceptual framework I call ‘recursive nationhood’ to a range of texts drawn from contemporary Russian visual culture

  • The article concludes by linking recursive nationhood in Londongrad to a post-Soviet version of stiob, the peculiarly Russian form of self-parodic discourse which arose at the end of the Soviet period

  • Common to these diverse contexts is the idea of the repeated application of a single function to an initial element in a succession capable of indefinite extension

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Summary

Introduction

This article forms an early part of a larger project that will apply a conceptual framework I call ‘recursive nationhood’ to a range of texts drawn from contemporary Russian visual culture. The article concludes by linking recursive nationhood in Londongrad to a post-Soviet version of stiob, the peculiarly Russian form of self-parodic discourse which arose at the end of the Soviet period.

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