You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (June 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (August 2013) |
The New Russians (Russian: новые русские novye russkie) were a newly rich business class who made their fortune in the 1990s in post-Soviet Russia. It is perceived as a stereotypical caricature. According to the stereotype, "New Russians" achieved rapid wealth by using criminal methods during Russia's chaotic transition to a market economy.
Etymology
editThe exact time and place, as well as the authorship of this expression, have not been fully established.
Some suggest that the expression "Новый Русский" (lit. "New Russian") arose in the Russian-speaking sphere in the ostensibly English-language form "New Russian", and after that calqued into the Russian-language form.[1] Another theory suggests the term appeared in foreign press and then made its way into Russia. Supporters of the latter theory suggest that the author of the expression was the American journalist Hedrick Smith who published two books about Russia: "The Russians" (1976) and "The New Russians" (1990).[2]
There's also a theory that it is more of a pun, playing on the French term "nouveau riche" (i.e. "new rich"),[2][3] whose meaning is very close to the term "New Russian". It is worth recalling that during Russia's industrial revolution at the end of the 19th century, Russians also used a term that was similar in meaning and use - skorobogach, Russian: скоробогач (literally “gotten-rich-quick man”, a person who very suddenly became wealthy; perhaps an individual with low moral principles).
In the documentary film With a hard-sign on the end (С твёрдом знаком на конце), dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the creation of the newspaper Kommersant (Коммерсантъ) and shown on Channel One on 30 November 2009), author Leonid Parfyonov demonstrates a copy of Kommersant from 1992 in which an editorial letter was addressed to the "New Russians". Parfyonov confirms that the newspaper first introduced this word into daily life, and at first it did not have any negative or ironic connotation, merely serving to describe the representatives of Russia's growing business class.[4]
In 2010, chief researcher at the Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Renald Simonyan noted that the “new Russians” were the product of the reforms of the 1990s, giving them the following characteristics: “Physically strong, poorly educated, assertive, devoid of moral values, and materialistic types”.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Костомаров В. Г. Языковой вкус эпохи. Из наблюдений за речевой практикой массмедиа. Archived 5 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine – 3-е изд., испр. и доп. – СПб.: Златоуст, 1999. – 319 с – ISBN 978-5-86547-070-0. – (Язык и время. Вып. 1).
- ^ a b Сафонова Ю. А. Новые русские (заметки об одном новом фразеологизме) // Russistik. — 1998.
- ^ Эрлих С. Е. 05_99/articles/erlih/erlih06.htm Россия колдунов-2 (Раскопки сакрального текста) Archived 5 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine // STRATUM plus . – 1999. – 05_99/index.htm № 5 (Неславянское в славянском мире). – С. 469—500.
- ^ "Ролик недоступен". Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
- ^ Симонян, Ренальд (2010). "О НЕКОТОРЫХ СОЦИОКУЛЬТУРНЫХ ИТОГАХ РОССИЙСКИХ ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКИХ РЕФОРМ 90-х ГОДОВ" (PDF). Мир перемен. 3, 2010: 98–114.
Sources
edit- Crimson Tide[dead link ], appearing in the British newspaper The Sunday Times.