Mark Bassin is a geographer and specialist on Russian and German geopolitics. He is currently employed as a professor in historical and contemporary studies at Södertörn University.
Life
Mark Bassin was born in 1953. Bassin gained his Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in 1983.
He has received personal fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, the Remarque Institute at New York University, the American Academy in Berlin, the Slavic-Eurasian Research Center in Sapporo, and the Leibniz Institute of European History in Mainz. Between 1 July 1988 and 1 December 1988, he was a research scholar at the Kennan Institute working on challenges to Siberian development.
His research has also been supported by grants from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the British Academy, the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), NCEEER, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and the Ford Foundation.
In 1995, he was a recipient of the Chester Penn Higby Prize from the American Historical Association.
From 1996 to 2004, he served as Secretary for the Commission for the History of Geographic Thought of the International Geographical Union.
From 2006 to 2009, his research was supported by a Major Research Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust.
Since 1999, Bassin has been Associate Editor for the journal Geopolitics.
He has been a consultant for the World Economic Forum, and is a founding member of the Valdai Discussion Club in Moscow, in which capacity he meets yearly with the Russian President and members of his government.
In 2017, he was awarded the Reginald Zelnik Book Prize in History from the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies.
He is an Associate Fellow of the Swedish Institute.
Teaching positions
He has taught at UCLA, the University of WisconsinâÂÂMadison, and University College London, and held visiting positions at the Universities of Chicago, Copenhagen, and Pau in France. In March 2005, while a visiting professor of geography at University College London, Bassin was invited to Russia as part of a UK expert group to meet with Vladimir Putin.
Until 2010, he was a professor in Human Geography at the University of Birmingham. In 2010, he became a professor at Södertörn University. His teaching and research interests include political, cultural and historical geography, as well as contemporary politics in Russia, Germany and Poland. He has also been a visiting professor at Uppsala University.
He has also been a speaker at the Centre of European Studies at Harvard University.
Publications
Source:
Books
- Imperial Visions: Nationalist Imagination and Geographical Expansion in the Russian Far East 1840-1865. Cambridge University Press, 1999.
- Soviet and Post-Soviet Identities. Cambridge University Press, 2012.
- Between Europe and Asia: The Origins, Theories, and Legacies of Russian Eurasianism - Russian and East European Studies. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2015.
- Space, Place, and Power in Modern Russia: Essays in the New Spatial History - NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. Publisher: Cornell University Press, 2018.
Journals and articles
- Classical Eurasianism and the Geopolitics of Russian Identity
- Eurasianism âÂÂClassicalâ and âÂÂNeoâÂÂ: The Lines of Continuity
- âÂÂCivilizations and their Discontents: Geography and Geopolitics in the Huntington Thesis,â article in Geopolitics
- âÂÂEthno-Landscapes and Ethno-Parasites: Lev GumilevâÂÂs Ecology of Ethnicity,â chapter in Ethnosymbolism: Critical Approaches to Ethnicity and Nationalism. Essays in Honor of Anthony Smith; Athena Leoussi and Stephen Grosby, eds; Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- âÂÂGeographies of Imperial Identity,â chapter in The Cambridge History of Russia, Vol. II, Dominic Lieven, ed, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
- âÂÂThe Morning of our Motherland (painting by Fedor Shurpin)â chapter in The Russian Visual Documents Reader, Valerie Kievelson and Joan Newberger, eds, New Haven: Yale University Press
- 2006 âÂÂMackinderâÂÂs Heartland and the Politics of Space in post-Soviet Russiaâ (with K.E. Aksenov), Geopolitics 11: 1
- 2005 âÂÂBlood or Soil? The volkisch movement, the Nazis, and the legacy of Geopolitik,â chapter in How Green were the Nazis? Nature, Environment, and Nation in the Third Reich, Franz-Josef Brüggemeier, Marc Cioc, and Thomas Zeller, eds, Athens OH: Ohio University Press: 204-242
- 2005 âÂÂThe Political Spaces of Modernity,â Conoscere il mondo: Vespucci e la modernitè (Memoire Geografiche, Nuova Serie, 5): 163âÂÂ176.
- 2005 ëàþÃÂÃÂøàüõöôàÃÂ÷øø ø ÃÂòÃÂþÿÃÂ: øôõþûþóøÃÂõÃÂúþõ úþýÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂøÃÂþòðýøõ óõþóÃÂðÃÂøÃÂõÃÂúþóþ ÿÃÂþÃÂÃÂÃÂðýÃÂÃÂòðû chapter in àþÃÂÃÂøùÃÂúðàøüÿõÃÂøàò ÃÂþòÃÂõüõýýþù ÷ðÃÂÃÂñõöýþù ûøÃÂõÃÂðÃÂÃÂÃÂà[The Russian Empire in Contemporary Foreign Literature] Paul Werth, Aleksei Miller, and Pavel Kabytov, eds. Moscow: ÃÂðÃÂÃÂñõöýðàÃÂøÃÂõÃÂðÃÂÃÂÃÂð, pp. 277âÂÂ310.
- 2004 âÂÂHistorical Geography: Locating Time in the Spaces of Modernityâ (with Vincent. Berdoulay), chapter in Human Geography: A History for the 21st Century, Georges Benko and Ulf Strohmeyer, eds. London: Arnold: 64âÂÂ82.
translated as: âÂÂLa Géographie historique: localiser le temps dans les espaces de la modernitéâ (with Vincent Berdoulay), chapter in Horizons géographiques, Georges Benko and Ulf Strohmeyer, eds. Paris: Brèal: 291âÂÂ338. Translation of 2004a.
- 2004 âÂÂThe Two Faces of Contemporary Geopolitics,â Progress in Human Geography 28: 620-626
- 2004 âÂÂTristes Toponymies: WhatâÂÂs Wrong with Eurasia,â Ab Imperio 1: 178âÂÂ183.
- 2003 ÃÂõþóÃÂðÃÂøàø ÃÂôõýÃÂøÃÂýþÃÂÃÂàò ÃÂþÃÂÃÂÃÂþòõÃÂÃÂúþù àþÃÂÃÂøø [Geography and Identity in Post-Soviet Russia]; Edited (with Konstantin E. Aksenov). St. Petersburg. ÃÂõûøúþý-ÃÂûÃÂÃÂ: 2003, 271pp.
- 2003 âÂÂBetween Realism and the âÂÂNew RightâÂÂ: Geopolitics in Germany in the 1990s,â Transactions IBG 28:3 New Series: 350-366.
- 2003 âÂÂPolitics From Nature: Environment, Ideology, and the Determinist Tradition,â chapter in A Companion to Political Geography, John Agnew, Katherine Mitchell, and Gerard Toal, eds. Basingstoke: Blackwell; 14-29
- 2003 âÂÂThe Greening of Utopia: Nature, Social Vision, and Landscape Art in Stalinist Russia,â chapter in Architectures Of Russian Identity, 1500âÂÂPresent, James Cracraft and Dan Rowland, eds. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 150âÂÂ171.
- 2003 "Siberia as discursive space: The geo-psychology of nationalism in 19th century Russia", ÃÂþôøÃÂÃÂðú ÷ð ôÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂòõýàøÃÂÃÂþÃÂøÃÂÃÂ/Annual for Social History (Belgrad) 10: 1-2: 27-50
- 2003 âÂÂClassical Eurasianism and the Geopolitics of Russian Identity,â Ab Imperio 2: 257âÂÂ267.
Translated as: ëÃÂûðÃÂÃÂøÃÂõÃÂúþõ õòÃÂð÷øùÃÂÃÂòþ ø óõþÿþûøÃÂúø ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂúþù øôõýÃÂøÃÂýþÃÂÃÂøû chapter in ÃÂþòðàÃÂüÿõÃÂÃÂúðàÃÂÃÂÃÂþÃÂøàÃÂþÃÂÃÂÃÂþòõÃÂÃÂúþóþ ÃÂÃÂþÃÂÃÂÃÂðýÃÂÃÂòð [New Imperial History of Post-Soviet Space], Ilya Gerasimov, Sergei Glebov, Aleksandr Kaplunovskii, Marina MogilâÂÂner, Aleksandr Semenov, eds. Kazan: æõýÃÂàÃÂÃÂÃÂûõô. ÃÂðÃÂ. ø ÃÂüÿõÃÂøø, 2004: 563âÂÂ572.
- 2003 ëàòþÿÃÂþÃÂàþ óõþóÃÂðÃÂøø ýðÃÂøþýðûÃÂýþù øôõýÃÂøÃÂýþÃÂÃÂøû [Questioning the Geography of National Identity], in 2003a: 10âÂÂ17.
- 2002 âÂÂImperialer Raum/Nationaler Raum: Sibirien auf der kognitiven Landkarte RuÃÂlands im 19. Jahrhundertâ [Imperial Space/National Space: Siberia on the Cognitive Map of Russia in the 19th Century], Geschichte und Gesellschaft: Zeitschrift für Historische Sozialwissenschaft 28:3, pp. 378âÂÂ403 [in German]
- 2002 âÂÂÃÂÃÂÃÂûøÃÂàÿÃÂþÃÂÃÂÃÂðýÃÂÃÂòþü: Eurasia And Ethno-Territoriality In Post-Soviet Maps,â chapter in S.K Frank and I.P. Smirnov, eds, Zeit-Räume. Neue Tendenzen in der historischen Kulturforschung aus der Perspektive der Slavistik (Wiener Slawistischer Almanach, Bd. 49): 15âÂÂ35.
- 2001 âÂÂRenaissance der Geopolitikâ [The Renaissance of Geopolitics], Der Tagesspiegel (Berlin) No. 17523 (9 September), p. B4 [in German]
- 2001 `âÂÂReading the Natural and the Social,â Intro. to Nature as Space: (re)understanding Nature and Natural Environments, Guven Sargen, ed, Ankara: MfY/METU; pp. 1âÂÂ11.
References
External links