Abstract
Abstract: This article reconstructs and analyzes the conformation of the Eurasian thought in Argentina materialized through the publishing practice carried out by a group of anti-Bolshevik Russian immigrants. The magazine they edited between 1941 and 1943, Tierra Rusa , experienced an approach to the Soviet regime as a result of the Nazi invasion to the Soviet Union. For this, the editors tried not to fall into historical, philosophical and political contradictions by promoting from its pages the coexistence between idealism and pragmatism of the Russian communism. In this intellectual operation, they put in the foreground their own “pro-Asian” and “anti-European” characteristics contained in the overall development of Stalin’s policy.
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